| Max Hastings - 1985 - 530 páginas
...and Hardinge endeavoured to unbuckle the belt to take it off; when he said with soldierly feelings, 'It is as well as it is; I had rather it should go out of the field with me.' His serenity was so striking, that Hardinge began to hope the wound was not mortal; he expressed his... | |
| Roger Parkinson - 2000 - 214 páginas
...jabbed into his open wound, and an aide started to unbuckle the belt: Moore told him to leave it be. 'I had rather it should go out of the field with me.' The British advance continued under the command of Sir John Hope while Moore was carried back down... | |
| J. T. Headley - 2006 - 380 páginas
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| J. T. Headley - 2006 - 297 páginas
...staff officer, who was near, attempted to take it off, but the dying man stopped him, saying, ' It is well as it is. I had rather it should go out of the field with me: " Thus was the hero borne from the field of battle. He died before night, and was buried in the citadel... | |
| Anonymous - 2006 - 416 páginas
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| M. B. Synge - 2013 - 249 páginas
...Hardinge, began to unbuckle his sword, but Moore stopped him. " It is well as it is," he murmured. " I had rather it should go out of the field with me." Every now and then he made the soldiers stop, halt, and turn round, so that he might see for himself... | |
| Wallace Harvey - 2008 - 444 páginas
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| Harry Thurston Peck, Frank R. Stockton, Julian Hawthorne - 1901 - 434 páginas
...hilt entered the wound. Captain Hardinge, a staff-officer, 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;" and in that manner, so becoming to a soldier, Moore was borne from the field. Notwithstanding this... | |
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