| Arthur Wellesley Duke of Wellington - 1838 - 684 sider
...completely accomplished their object. They must be prepared and must be forced to make all sacrifices to the cause. Submission to military discipline and...Government should have adopted this measure, on the same principle that I recommended them three years ago, to make three stands of arms for one they made before,... | |
| Arthur Wellesley Duke of Wellington - 1838 - 686 sider
...completely accomplished their object. They must be prepared and must be forced to make all sacrifices to the cause. Submission to military discipline and...Government should have adopted this measure, on the same principle that I recommended them three years ago, to make three stands of arms for one they made before,... | |
| Arthur Wellesley (1st duke of Wellington.) - 1838 - 806 sider
...and people can be forced by it to perform their duty. This is the rock upon which Spain has spirt; and all our measures in any other country which should...Government should have adopted this measure, on the same principle that I recommended them three years ago, to make three stands of arms for one they made before,... | |
| sir James Edward Alexander - 1840 - 620 sider
...contributions of the people; and although Great Britain can and ought to assist with money, as well as in other modes, every effort of this description, the principal financial as well u military effort ought to be by the people of the resisting country." Though still in the month of... | |
| Arthur Wellesley Duke of Wellington - 1842 - 1008 sider
...go hand in hand with measures to raise it. I am quite certain that the finances of Great Britain are more than a match for Buonaparte, and that we shall...ought to be by the people of the resisting country.' 615. MEMORANDUM OF OPERATIONS IN 1811. The Notet to thti Memorandum are in the Manuscript. Freneda,... | |
| sir Archibald Alison (1st bart.) - 1850 - 740 sider
...contributions of the people; although Great Britain can and ought to assist with money, as well as in other modes, every effort of this description,...ought to be by the people of the resisting country."* Here is the true view both of the power of revolutionary France, of the failure of the efforts hitherto... | |
| Arthur Wellesley Duke of Wellington - 1851 - 1038 sider
...money, as well in other modes, every effort of this description, the principal financial as well to. military effort ought to be by the people of the resisting country.' 615. MEMORANDUM OF OPERATIONS IN 1811. The Noles to this Memorandum are in the Manuscript. Freneda,... | |
| Joachim Hayward Stocqueler - 1852 - 440 sider
...Jiand-in-hand with measures to raise it. I am quite certain that the finances of Great Britain are more than a match for Buonaparte, and that we shall...ought to be by the people of the resisting country." The winter of 1811 was very severe, and professional inaction rendered it sometimes a difficult matter... | |
| Joachim Hayward Stocqueler - 1852 - 448 sider
...aiding any country that may be disposed to resist his tyranny. But those means are necessarilylimited in every country by the difficulty of procuring specie....ought to be by the people of the resisting country." The winter of 18ll was very severe, and professional inaction rendered it sometimes a difficult matter... | |
| Alexander Charles Ewald - 1879 - 378 sider
...go hand-in-hand with measures to raise it. I am quite certain that the finances of Great Britain are more than a match for Buonaparte, and that we shall...ought to be by the people of the resisting country." Joseph Bonaparte had been transferred from the throne of Naples to that of Spain, it is thus that Wellington... | |
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