liable to be called upon on such emergencies to furnish their largest craft for the public service. Thirty-four of these ships were from 500 to 1,100 tons burthen each, and these larger vessels are said to have carried 300 men and forty cannon each. Besides the vessels thus called out for war, the mercantile navy at this time amounted to another 150 sail of various capacity, averaging each 150 tons, and carrying forty seamen.
Ordinary Costume of the days of Queen Mary. Beards of the sixteenth Century. 1. The Spade. 2. The Stiletto. 3. Double Stiletto. 4. Round Beard. Dress of a Lady, 1485.
Beards of the sixteenth Century. Head-dresses of the sixteenth Century.
Female Costume, 1600. Ladies' Head-dresses, sixteenth Century. Ordinary Costume, Time of Henry VIII.
This extent of Royal and mercantile navy had not been reached without much fostering care on the part of the queen. With all her parsimony and dread of expense, it was one of the finest parts of her very mixed character, that she saw the necessity of a strong power at sea, and had all the pride of her father to maintain it. Whilst on land she introduced the manufacture of gunpowder, and raised the pay of the soldiers, she extended her care