The Edinburgh Annual Register, Bind 1;Bind 2,Del 1Walter Scott John Ballantyne and Company, 1811 |
Fra bogen
Resultater 1-5 af 100
Side 1
... cause of Spain . He con- tinued to receive from the Spanish government the strongest assurances of their determined perseverance in the cause of their lawful monarchy , and their national independence ; and VOL . II . PART I. so long as ...
... cause of Spain . He con- tinued to receive from the Spanish government the strongest assurances of their determined perseverance in the cause of their lawful monarchy , and their national independence ; and VOL . II . PART I. so long as ...
Side 2
... cause ; it is the cause of Europe and of the world . We cannot but concur in applauding the resolution of the Spaniards , to persevere to the last extremity in the contest for their liberty - a resolution worthy of that noble nation ...
... cause ; it is the cause of Europe and of the world . We cannot but concur in applauding the resolution of the Spaniards , to persevere to the last extremity in the contest for their liberty - a resolution worthy of that noble nation ...
Side 5
... cause in which they were fighting against the tyrant who unjustly and cruelly Ha- attacked them ; but there had been no prospect that ought to have in- duced any reasonable men to send a British army into the interior of Spain . I am ...
... cause in which they were fighting against the tyrant who unjustly and cruelly Ha- attacked them ; but there had been no prospect that ought to have in- duced any reasonable men to send a British army into the interior of Spain . I am ...
Side 6
... cause of the patriots . - It may be said that there was a time when a British force of 30 or 40,000 men might have driven the French beyond the Pyrenees . Allowing it to be so , how had this been taken advantage of ? One might have ...
... cause of the patriots . - It may be said that there was a time when a British force of 30 or 40,000 men might have driven the French beyond the Pyrenees . Allowing it to be so , how had this been taken advantage of ? One might have ...
Side 10
... cause of the Spaniards as long as they proved true to them- selves . In what way that support had been given , or how it was in fu- ture to be administered , would be a subject of distinct and detailed consi- deration . All that they ...
... cause of the Spaniards as long as they proved true to them- selves . In what way that support had been given , or how it was in fu- ture to be administered , would be a subject of distinct and detailed consi- deration . All that they ...
Andre udgaver - Se alle
Almindelige termer og sætninger
appointed arms artillery attack Austrian batteries battle British army brought Buonaparte Cadiz called Captain cause cavalry charge Clarke Colonel Wardle command conduct consequence considered convention of Cintra corps corruption coun Cuesta declared defended Duke of York duty effect emperor enemy England English evil favour feeling fire force formed France French Frere Galicia garrison honourable hope horse House inquiry junta king land letter Lord Lord Castlereagh Lord Cochrane Madrid means measure ment military ministers nation neral never night object officers opinion Parliament party patriots Perceval persons Portugal Portugueze possession present prince prisoners proceeded replied retreat royal highness sent ships sion Sir Arthur Sir Arthur Wellesley Sir Francis Burdett Sir John Moore soldiers Soult Spain Spaniards Spanish tain taken ther thing thought tion town troops vernment Whitbread whole wish wounded Zaragoza
Populære passager
Side 290 - And every one that was in distress, and every one that was in debt, and every one that was discontented, gathered themselves unto him; and he became a captain over them: and there were with him about four hundred men.
Side 330 - The tax which each individual is bound to pay ought to be certain, and not arbitrary. The time of payment, the manner of payment, the quantity to be paid, ought all to be clear and plain to the contributor, and to every other person.
Side 221 - Nemesis visiting the sins of the fathers upon the children to the third and fourth generation...
Side 149 - Master French must mind what he is about, or I shall cut up him and his levy too.
Side 414 - Upon receiving through you, on the part of the American Government, a distinct and official Recognition of the three above-mentioned Conditions, His Majesty will lose no time in sending to America a Minister fully empowered to consign them to a formal and regular Treaty.
Side 107 - I was sensible, however, that the apathy and indifference of the Spaniards would never have been believed ; that, had the British been withdrawn, the loss of the cause would have been imputed to their retreat ; and it was necessary to risk this army to convince the people of England, as well as the rest of Europe, that the Spaniards had neither the power, nor the inclination, to make any efforts for themselves.
Side 415 - As it appears at the same time, that, in making this offer, his Britannic majesty derives a motive from the equality, now existing, in the relations of the United States, with the two belligerent powers, the president owes it to the occasion, and to himself, to let it be understood, that this equality is a result incident to a state of things, growing out of distinct considerations.
Side 747 - The experience of every day shows the absolute necessity that the British army should withdraw from this country. It is useless to complain ; but we are certainly not treated as friends, much less as the only prop on which the cause of Spain can depend.
Side 262 - ... hunger, to whom it must stand in the place of food and raiment ; while the same law did not scruple to permit the sale of these spirits by wholesale on the part of the rich merchant or still more opulent planter...
Side 68 - I care not whether you do it by a secret, a select committee, or a committee of the whole House ; for either of these will satisfy me, and will gain the object which the country must have in view." Mr Ponsonby then concluded by moving, " That it is indispensably necessary that this House should inquire into the causes, conduct, and events of the late campaign in Spain.