The Life of George, Lord Anson: Admiral of the Fleet, Vice-admiral of Great Britain, and First Lord Commissioner of the Admiralty, Previous To, and During, the Seven Years' WarJ. Murray, 1839 - 484 sider |
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Side vii
... appears to be set at rest by what follows . In 1761 , Dr. James Wilson , a particular friend of Mr. Robins , published his " Mathematical Tracts , " in the preface of which he satisfactorily decides the question whether Mr. Walter , the ...
... appears to be set at rest by what follows . In 1761 , Dr. James Wilson , a particular friend of Mr. Robins , published his " Mathematical Tracts , " in the preface of which he satisfactorily decides the question whether Mr. Walter , the ...
Side ix
... appears to be simply this - that Walter drew the cold and naked skeleton , and that Robins clothed it with flesh and muscles , and , by the warmth of his imagination ( chaleur d'imagination , as a French writer says ) , caused the blood ...
... appears to be simply this - that Walter drew the cold and naked skeleton , and that Robins clothed it with flesh and muscles , and , by the warmth of his imagination ( chaleur d'imagination , as a French writer says ) , caused the blood ...
Side x
... appears to have been owing to constant service and strict at- tention to their duties , which rarely fail ; at the period in question , when the lists were not so swelled as now , young men like these were sure to succeed . Howe rose to ...
... appears to have been owing to constant service and strict at- tention to their duties , which rarely fail ; at the period in question , when the lists were not so swelled as now , young men like these were sure to succeed . Howe rose to ...
Side xi
... appears to be a great contrast : the one was fond of writing , the other appears to have abhorred it ; and this leads me to speak of the mate- rials I have collected for the Memoir of Anson . PREFACE . xi.
... appears to be a great contrast : the one was fond of writing , the other appears to have abhorred it ; and this leads me to speak of the mate- rials I have collected for the Memoir of Anson . PREFACE . xi.
Side xii
... appears that Anson , unlike Howe , was as sparing of his pen as of his tongue . Of whatever letters he may have written , not purely official , few have been found ; and , I understand that those I have spoken of from his correspondents ...
... appears that Anson , unlike Howe , was as sparing of his pen as of his tongue . Of whatever letters he may have written , not purely official , few have been found ; and , I understand that those I have spoken of from his correspondents ...
Andre utgaver - Vis alle
The Life of George, Lord Anson: Admiral of the Fleet, Vice-admiral of Great ... Sir John Barrow Uten tilgangsbegrensning - 1839 |
The Life of George, Lord Anson: Admiral of the Fleet, Vice-admiral of Great ... Sir John Barrow Uten tilgangsbegrensning - 1839 |
The Life of George, Lord Anson: Admiral of the Fleet, Vice-admiral of Great ... Sir John Barrow Uten tilgangsbegrensning - 1839 |
Vanlige uttrykk og setninger
able Admiral Admiral Byng afterwards Anson's Collection appears appointed arrived attack Board of Admiralty Boscawen Brest British Byng Cape Captain captured carried Centurion character Charles Wager coast command commission Commodore Conflans council court-martial crew death desire Duke of Bedford Duke of Newcastle EDITION enemy enemy's engaged England expedition favour Fcap fire flag flag-officers fleet force France French frigates gallant George give guns Hardwicke honour hundred Indies island killed King Lady land Legge letter lieutenant LIST OF BOOKS Lord Anson Lord Sandwich Lordship Majesty marines Minorca MURRAY'S LIST naval navy never occasion officers opinion peace Piercy Brett Pitt ports Post 8vo proceeded Rear-Admiral received Royal sail sail-of-the-line says scurvy seamen sent shore Sir Charles Sir Edward Hawke Sir John sloop soon Spain Spaniards Spanish squadron taken tion troops Vice-Admiral vols voyage Walpole whole wounded
Populære avsnitt
Side 212 - An Act to explain and amend an act made in the twenty-second year of the reign of His late Majesty King George the Second, intituled, ' An Act for amending, explaining, and reducing into one Act of Parliament the laws relating to the government of His Majesty's ships, vessels, and forces by sea...
Side 11 - A circumstance was brought to light in the examinations that took place before the committee of the House of Commons, appointed to inquire into the Spanish abuses, which created a deep feeling of indignation in the country.
Side 262 - ... sake, as well as in justice to the prisoner, we pray your lordships, in the most earnest manner, to recommend him to his majesty's clemency.
Side 38 - This disease is likewise usually attended with a strange dejection of the spirits, and with shiverings, tremblings, and a disposition to be seized with the most dreadful terrors on the slightest accident.
Side 254 - By a strange coincidence of circumstances, it happened that there was a total change of administration between his condemnation and his death ; so that one party presided at his trial, and another at his execution : there can be no stronger proof that he was not a political...
Side 330 - When I consider the season of the year, the hard gales on the day of action, a flying enemy, the shortness of the day, and the coast they were on, I can boldly affirm that all that could possibly be done has been done.
Side 469 - We came to few places where either the art of man or nature did not afford some sort of refreshment or other, either of the animal or vegetable kind. It was my first care to procure what could be met with of either by every means in my power, and to oblige our people to make use thereof, both by my example and authority ; but the benefits arising from such refreshments soon became so obvious that I had little occasion to employ either the one or the other influence on the men.
Side 105 - Sir, he was a scoundrel and a coward: a scoundrel for charging ' a blunderbuss against religion and morality; and a coward ' because he had not resolution to fire it off himself, but left ' half-a-crown to a beggarly Scotchman to draw the trigger
Side 260 - May last, he did withdraw or keep back, and did not do his utmost to take, seize, and destroy, the ships of the French King, which it was his duty to have engaged, and to assist such of his Majesty's ships as were engaged in fight with the French ships, which it was his duty to have assisted ; and for that he did not do his utmost to relieve St. Philip's Castle, in his Majesty's island of Minorca, then besieged by the forces of the French King...
Side 68 - ... and full manned, yet, if his own people behaved with their accustomed spirit, he was certain he should prove too hard for them both, and that one of them at least could not fail of becoming his prize. He...