History of the War in the Peninsula and in the South of France, from the Year 1807 to the Year 1814John Murray, 1828 - 2 páginas |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-5 de 96
Página xviii
... four letters from Berthier to general Savary - One from marshal Berthier to king Joseph . XXX 8. Four letters . Mr. Drummond to sir A. Ball - Ditto to sir Hew Dalrymple -Sir Hew Dalrymple to lord Castlereagh - Lord Castlereagh to sir ...
... four letters from Berthier to general Savary - One from marshal Berthier to king Joseph . XXX 8. Four letters . Mr. Drummond to sir A. Ball - Ditto to sir Hew Dalrymple -Sir Hew Dalrymple to lord Castlereagh - Lord Castlereagh to sir ...
Página xviii
... four hundred , read three and four hundred . HISTORY OF THE PENINSULAR WAR . BOOK I. CHAPTER I.
... four hundred , read three and four hundred . HISTORY OF THE PENINSULAR WAR . BOOK I. CHAPTER I.
Página 18
... four thousand seven hundred in number , took up their quarters at Salamanca . the French MSS . It thus appeared as if the French troops were quietly following the natural line of communication between France and Portugal ; but in ...
... four thousand seven hundred in number , took up their quarters at Salamanca . the French MSS . It thus appeared as if the French troops were quietly following the natural line of communication between France and Portugal ; but in ...
Página 53
... four principal roads which lead from France directly upon Madrid are , first , the royal causeway , which passing the frontier at Irun runs under St. Sebastian , and then through a wild and mountainous country ( full of dangerous ...
... four principal roads which lead from France directly upon Madrid are , first , the royal causeway , which passing the frontier at Irun runs under St. Sebastian , and then through a wild and mountainous country ( full of dangerous ...
Página 54
... four great roads leading upon Madrid ; if the French had occupied it in force , their army in the capital would have been free and unconstrained in its operations , and might have acted with more security against Valencia ; and the ...
... four great roads leading upon Madrid ; if the French had occupied it in force , their army in the capital would have been free and unconstrained in its operations , and might have acted with more security against Valencia ; and the ...
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
Términos y frases comunes
Abrantes affairs Alemtejo Andalusia Andujar Appendix arms arrived artillery Astorga Asturias attack Barcelona battle Baylen Bayonne Benevente Bessieres Bilbao Blake BOOK brigade British army Burgos Cadiz campaign capital Castaños Castille Catalonia cavalry centre CHAP colonel columns command commenced convention corps Coruña Cuesta danger defence despatch detachment division duke Dupont Ebro emperor enemy England English army flank force France French army Gallicia garrison guard guns hundred insurgents insurrection John Moore's Junot junta king latter Leon Lisbon Logroña Loison Madrid marshal ment military Moncey Morla movement Napoleon nation occupied officers operations Oporto orders Palafox passed patriots Peninsula Portugal Portuguese position provinces rear regiments reinforcements retired retreat Reynosa river road sent Seville side sir Arthur Wellesley sir Hew Dalrymple sir John Moore soldiers somatenes Spain Spaniards Spanish armies Tagus Thiebault thousand infantry tion Torres Vedras town troops Tudela Valencia Zaragoza
Pasajes populares
Página 501 - ... of his actions. He maintained the right with a vehemence bordering upon fierceness, and every important transaction in which he was engaged increased his reputation for talent, and confirmed his character as a stern enemy to vice, a steadfast friend to merit, a just and faithful servant of his country. The honest loved him, the dishonest feared him; for while he lived he did not shun, but scorned and spurned the base, and, with characteristic propriety, they spurned at him when he was dead.
Página 533 - The French army shall carry with it all its equipments, and all that is comprehended under the name of property of the army...
Página 501 - Opposing sound military views to the foolish projects so insolently thrust upon him by the ambassador, he conducted his long and arduous retreat with sagacity, intelligence, and fortitude ; no insult disturbed, no falsehood deceived him, no remonstrance shook his determination; fortune frowned without subduing his constancy ; death struck, but the spirit of the man remained unbroken when his shattered body scarcely...
Página 533 - France shall have disembarked it in the harbours specified, or in any other of the ports of France to which stress of weather may force them, every facility shall be given them to return to England without delay ; and security against capture until their arrival in a friendly port. ART.
Página 38 - ... This universal, and nearly simultaneous effort of the Spanish people was beheld by the rest of Europe with astonishment and admiration ; astonishment at the energy thus suddenly put forth by a nation hitherto deemed unnerved and debased ; admiration at the devoted courage of an act, which, seen at a distance and its odious parts unknown, appeared with all the ideal beauty of Numantian patriotism. In England the enthusiasm was unbounded ; dazzled at first with the splendour of such an agreeable,...
Página 533 - XV. From the date of the ratification of the present convention, all arrears of contributions, requisitions, or claims whatever, of the French government, against...
Página 497 - ... broken, and bared of flesh, and the muscles of the breast torn into long strips, which were interlaced by their recoil from the dragging of the shot. As the soldiers placed him in a blanket his sword got entangled, and the hilt entered the wound. Captain Hardinge, a staff officer, who was near, attempted to take it off, but the dying man stopped him, saying, " It is as " well as it is. I had rather it should go out of the field with "me.
Página 38 - Dilatory and improvident, the individual as well as the mass, all possess an absurd confidence that every thing is practicable which their heated imaginations suggest; once excited, they can see no difficulty in the execution of a project, and the obstacles they encounter are attributed to treachery ; hence the sudden murder of so many virtuous men at the commencement of this commotion.
Página 533 - ... may judge it unnecessary to embark. In like manner, all individuals of the army shall be at liberty to dispose of their private property of every description, with full security hereafter for the purchasers.
Página 533 - The French army shall carry with it all its artillery, of French calibre, with the horses belonging to it, and the tumbrils supplied with sixty rounds per gun. All other artillery, arms, and ammunition, as also the military and naval arsenals...