Life of ... the duke of Wellington, Volumen1 |
Dentro del libro
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Página vi
... object in view ought to be to represent other characters in their full proportions before the public eye . It becomes then a biographer's duty to supply the entire text , as it were of their lives — the full volume of their minds ...
... object in view ought to be to represent other characters in their full proportions before the public eye . It becomes then a biographer's duty to supply the entire text , as it were of their lives — the full volume of their minds ...
Página ix
... object of the present work ; while it endeavours to do honour to the genius which conceived plans both military and political crowned with last- ing success at Waterloo , and which decided the destinies of Europe , it will bring the ...
... object of the present work ; while it endeavours to do honour to the genius which conceived plans both military and political crowned with last- ing success at Waterloo , and which decided the destinies of Europe , it will bring the ...
Página x
... object which they have in view , they do not satisfy public curiosity and attention with regard to the individual and the man . Important as these works are , and valuable as public records , many of them written by men who bore a share ...
... object which they have in view , they do not satisfy public curiosity and attention with regard to the individual and the man . Important as these works are , and valuable as public records , many of them written by men who bore a share ...
Página 4
... object of interest so far as their education may be supposed to have supplied them with those principles and those ... objects than personal aggrandizement . A sense of justice and public uti- lity , founded upon the broad basis of the ...
... object of interest so far as their education may be supposed to have supplied them with those principles and those ... objects than personal aggrandizement . A sense of justice and public uti- lity , founded upon the broad basis of the ...
Página 39
... object at that period to destroy the influence of France , and the power of the Sultan ; and both the Governor - general and the Indian government at home , were aware of the deeper policy of allowing the grand project to proceed till ...
... object at that period to destroy the influence of France , and the power of the Sultan ; and both the Governor - general and the Indian government at home , were aware of the deeper policy of allowing the grand project to proceed till ...
Términos y frases comunes
action affairs allies appeared arms arrival artillery attack Baird battalions battle battle of Talavera body brigade British army British troops Cadiz camp campaign cavalry character circumstances Ciudad Rodrigo Coimbra Colonel Stevenson Colonel Wellesley command commander-in-chief conduct corps Cuesta defence Despatches detachment directed discipline division Duke duty enemy enemy's engaged England English expedition favour flank force French army frontier Governor-general guns honour horse infantry junta less letter Lisbon Lord Wellington loss Mahratta Major-general Marshal Beresford Massena measures ment military Mondego movements Mysore Napoleon Nizam numbers object observed officers operations opinion Oporto parties passed Peshwah Portugal Portuguese position possession proceeded Rajah rear received regiment retired retreat river Scindiah Sir Arthur Wellesley Sir Harry Burrard Sir Hew Sir John Moore soldiers Soult Spain Spaniards Spanish army spirit success Sultan supplies Tagus Talavera tion victory Viseu whole wounded
Pasajes populares
Página 269 - I hope the People of England will be satisfied! - I hope my Country will do me justice!
Página 312 - I have long been of opinion, that a British army could bear neither success nor failure, and I have had manifest proofs of the truth of this opinion in the first of its branches in the recent conduct of the soldiers of this army. They have plundered the country most terribly, which has given me the greatest concern.
Página 371 - Talavera, (not 100 yards from the place where I was standing,) who were neither attacked, nor threatened with an attack, and who were frightened only by the noise of their own fire : they left their arms and accoutrements on the ground, their officers went with them; and they, and the fugitive cavalry, plundered the baggage of the British army which had been sent to the rear. Many others went whom I did not see.
Página 219 - I think if General Hill's brigade and the advanced guard had moved upon Torres Vedras, as soon as it was certain that the enemy's right had been defeated by our left, and our left had pursued their advantage, the enemy would have been cut off from Torres Vedras, and we should have been at Lisbon before him; if, indeed, any French army had remained in Portugal.
Página 335 - ... wounded soldiers dying in the hospital in this town from want of common assistance and necessaries, which any other country in the world would have given even to its enemies ; and that I can get no assistance of any description from the country. I cannot prevail upon them even to bury the dead carcasses in the neighbourhood, the stench of which will destroy themselves as well as us.
Página 203 - Portuguese troops, which might be easily raised at an early period ; and 20,000 British, including 4000 or 5000 cavalry. This army might operate on the frontiers of Portugal in Spanish Estremadura, and it would serve as the link between the kingdoms of Galicia and Andalusia : it would give Great Britain the preponderance in the conduct of the war in the Peninsula ; and whatever might be the result of the Spanish exertions, Portugal would be saved from the French grasp. You know best whether you could...
Página 243 - It appears to me to be quite impossible that we can go on as we are now constituted ; the Commander-inchief must be changed, and the country and the army naturally turn their eyes to you as their commander.
Página 92 - I had served, placed unlimited confidence in me, and 1 had received from both strong and repeated marks of their 'approbation. Before I quitted the Mysore country, I arranged the plan for taking possession of the ceded districts, which was done without striking a blow ; and another plan for conquering Wynaad and reconquering Malabar, which I am informed has succeeded without loss on our side. But this supercession has ruined all my prospects, founded upon any service that I may have rendered.
Página 79 - Chinnoor, but I was not to be prevailed upon to stop ; and even went so far as to threaten to hang a great man sent to show me the road, who manifested an inclination to show me a good road to a different place.
Página 203 - All that I can say upon that subject is, that whether I am to command the army or not, or am to quit it, I shall do my best to insure its success ; and you may depend upon it that I shall not hurry the operations, or commence them one moment sooner than they ought to be commenced, in order that I may acquire the credit of the success.