Annals of the Peninsular campaigns, by the author of Cyril Thornton, Volumen21829 |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-5 de 20
Página 12
... engaged in rallying the remains of Blake's army , at a distance of about two hundred miles . Naturally distrustful of the apocryphal intelligence transmitted by the Bri- tish military residents , he could rely only on the reports of ...
... engaged in rallying the remains of Blake's army , at a distance of about two hundred miles . Naturally distrustful of the apocryphal intelligence transmitted by the Bri- tish military residents , he could rely only on the reports of ...
Página 51
... engaged in operations from which he anticipated little beneficial result ; and , still contemplating the probability of retreat , he declined assuming the chief command of the Spanish armies , which was at this time offered him . The ...
... engaged in operations from which he anticipated little beneficial result ; and , still contemplating the probability of retreat , he declined assuming the chief command of the Spanish armies , which was at this time offered him . The ...
Página 92
... engaged in watching the result of the contest about Elvina , when a cannon shot struck him on the breast and beat him to the ground . He raised himself immediately to a sitting posture , and continued with a calm gaze to regard the ...
... engaged in watching the result of the contest about Elvina , when a cannon shot struck him on the breast and beat him to the ground . He raised himself immediately to a sitting posture , and continued with a calm gaze to regard the ...
Página 132
... . While the French were engaged before Ro- sas , General Vives had been engrossed with preparations for the siege of Barcelona . He had taken none of the ordinary means for ob- CONDUCT OF VIVES . 133 taining prompt knowledge of the.
... . While the French were engaged before Ro- sas , General Vives had been engrossed with preparations for the siege of Barcelona . He had taken none of the ordinary means for ob- CONDUCT OF VIVES . 133 taining prompt knowledge of the.
Página 174
... powers should make common cause against France ; that Great Britain should ac- knowledge no sovereign of Spain but Ferdinand VII . , or his lawful heirs ; and the Spanish go- IN PORTUGAL AND SPAIN . 175 vernment engaged never to.
... powers should make common cause against France ; that Great Britain should ac- knowledge no sovereign of Spain but Ferdinand VII . , or his lawful heirs ; and the Spanish go- IN PORTUGAL AND SPAIN . 175 vernment engaged never to.
Términos y frases comunes
advance arms arrived artillery Astorga attack Barcelona battery battle BATTLE OF CORUNNA BATTLE OF TALAVERA Benevente besiegers body bridge brigade British army Cadiz Catalonia cavalry CHAP CHAP.VIII Colonel column command commenced corps Corunna crossed Cuesta December defeat defence despatched detachment directed division driven Ebro efforts enemy enemy's fire flank force French army Frere front gain possession Gallicia garrison Gerona guns heights hope hundred immediately infantry January junction Lerida Lord Wellington loss Lugo Madrid Marshal Soult Massena ment Miquelets mountains movement Napoleon night occupied operations Oporto Paget Palafox passed Placentia Portugal Portuguese position prisoners reached rear Reding regiment resistance retired retreat river road Romana Salamanca siege Sir Arthur Wellesley Sir David Baird Sir John Moore soldiers Spain Spaniards Spanish army succeeded success Suchet suffered Supreme Junta Tagus Talavera thousand tion took town troops Valencia Victor Villa Franca wounded Zaragoza
Pasajes populares
Página 93 - It is as well as it is. I had rather it should go out of the field with me ;" and in that manner, so becoming to a soldier, Moore was borne from the fight.
Página 281 - When I shall show myself beyond" the Pyrenees, the frightened leopard will fly to the ocean, to avoid shame, defeat, and death. The triumph of my arms will be the triumph of the genius of good, over that of evil; of moderation, order, and morality, over civil war, anarchy, and the bad passions.
Página 98 - No coffin could be procured, and the officers of his staff wrapped the body, dressed as it was, in a military cloak and blankets. The interment was hastened : for about eight in the morning some firing was heard, and the officers feared that if a serious attack...
Página 96 - I hope the people of England will be satisfied!" "I hope my country will do me justice!
Página 96 - He then thanked the doctors for their attention. Captains Percy and Stanhope came into the room ; he spoke kindly to both, and asked Percy if all his aides-de-camp were well. He pressed my hand close to his body, and, in a few minutes, died without a struggle.
Página 327 - I make known and declare that all magistrates and persons in authority, who shall remain in the villages or towns, after having received orders from the military officer to remove from them, and all persons, of whatever class they may be, who shall maintain the least communication with, or aid and assist...
Página 107 - Coruna to this place and Astorga is remarkably good, although mountainous; and, with the sea open to us, we should be able to receive with facility such reinforcements and supplies as the British government might deem it proper to send.
Página 13 - Lisbon — covera country where there is a British interest — act as a diversion in favour of Spain, if the French -detach a force against me — and am ready to return to the assistance of the Spaniards, should circumstances -again render it eligible.
Página 50 - I am unwilling to enlarge upon a subject in which my feelings must be CHAP. stifled, or expressed at the risk of offence, which, with such an interest at stake, I should feel unwilling to excite, but this much I must say, that if the British army had been sent abroad for the express purpose of doing the utmost possible mischief to the Spanish cause, with the single exception of not firing a shot against their troops, they would, according to the measures now announced as about to be pursued, have...
Página 106 - Romana; and, if you judged it proper by a flank movement to join us in the neighbourhood of Astorga, I entertain a confident belief that, by occupying the strong ground behind it, we should be able to cover the country in our rear, and might wait until it is seen what efforts the Spanish nation is disposed and determined to make in defence of the national independence.