The Memoirs of Captain George Carleton: And The Life and Adventures of Mrs. Christian Davies |
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Page 2
... four or five days , when De Ruyter , hearing of it , made his signal for sailing , in order to surprise us ; and he had certainly had his aim , had there been any breeze of wind to favour him . But though they made use of all their ...
... four or five days , when De Ruyter , hearing of it , made his signal for sailing , in order to surprise us ; and he had certainly had his aim , had there been any breeze of wind to favour him . But though they made use of all their ...
Page 6
... four or five at a time . Some persons at that time aboard the ship admiring at the manner of their return , and speaking of it with some surprise , sir Edward Sprage told them that he brought those pigeons with him from the Straits ...
... four or five at a time . Some persons at that time aboard the ship admiring at the manner of their return , and speaking of it with some surprise , sir Edward Sprage told them that he brought those pigeons with him from the Straits ...
Page 9
... four first rose to be very eminent ; but fortune is not to all alike favourable . In about a week's time after , it was resolved in a council of war , to march towards Binch , a small walled town , about four leagues from Nivelle ; the ...
... four first rose to be very eminent ; but fortune is not to all alike favourable . In about a week's time after , it was resolved in a council of war , to march towards Binch , a small walled town , about four leagues from Nivelle ; the ...
Page 11
... four years of age , had the suffrage of friend and foe , of having played the part of an old and experienced officer . There were left that day on the field of battle , by a general computation , not less than eighteen thousand men on ...
... four years of age , had the suffrage of friend and foe , of having played the part of an old and experienced officer . There were left that day on the field of battle , by a general computation , not less than eighteen thousand men on ...
Page 17
... four regiments , as be- fore , were detached a captain , a lieutenant , and an en- sign , with fifty men : captain Anthony Barnwell , of sir John Fenwick's regiment , who was now my captain , commanding that attack . At break of day the ...
... four regiments , as be- fore , were detached a captain , a lieutenant , and an en- sign , with fifty men : captain Anthony Barnwell , of sir John Fenwick's regiment , who was now my captain , commanding that attack . At break of day the ...
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The Memoirs of Captain George Carleton: And the Life and Adventures of Mrs ... Daniel Defoe No preview available - 2017 |
Common terms and phrases
allies answered arms army arrived attack Barcelona battalions batteries battle battle of Almanza besieged breach brigadier called camp capitulation captain carried castle Catalonia colonel command danger dragoons duke of Marlborough Dutch earl of Peterborow encamped endeavoured enemy English father favour fire fleet foot forces France French garrison gate gave gentlemen Ghent give governor hand head honour horse hundred husband imagined immediately intrenchments king Charles king William kingdom of Valencia lady leagues leave Lerida lord lord Galway lordship Madrid marshal Boufflers marshal Villars Miquelets Monjouick morning never night notwithstanding obliged officers pass person prince of Orange prisoners prisoners of war quarters ready reason received regiment resolved retreat sent ship side siege siege of Barcelona soldiers soon Spain Spaniards squadrons surrender sword taken thought thousand tion told took town troops Valencia wounded
Popular passages
Page xix - A fiery soul, which, working out its way, Fretted the pigmy body to decay, And o'er-informed the tenement of clay...
Page xix - There my retreat the best companions grace, Chiefs out of war, and statesmen out of place: There St. John mingles with my friendly bowl The feast of reason and the flow of soul: And he, whose lightning pierced the' Iberian lines, Now forms my quincunx, and now ranks my vines; Or tames the genius of the stubborn plain, Almost as quickly as he conquer'd Spain.
Page xvii - His meagre corpse, though full of vigour, Would halt behind him, were it bigger. So wonderful his expedition, When you have not the least suspicion, He's with you like an apparition. Shines in all climates like a star; In senates bold, and fierce in war ; A land commander, and a tar. Heroic actions early bred in, Ne'er to be matched in modern reading, But by his namesake, Charles of Sweden.
Page ix - THE MEMOIRS OF AN English Officer, Who serv'd in the Dutch War in 1672. to the Peace of Utrecht, in 1713. Containing several Remarkable TRANSACTIONS both by Sea and Land, and in divers countries, but chiefly those wherein the Author was personally concerned.
Page 21 - I had the curiosity to advance a little further, when, at the mouth of the oven, which had not yet wholly lost its heat, I spied the corpse of a man so bloated, swollen and parched, as left me little room to doubt that the oven had been the scene of his destiny.
Page 113 - But on his marching out of it next morning a shot in the back laid that officer dead upon the spot ; and, as it had been before concerted, the Spaniards of the place at the same time fell upon the poor weak soldiers, killing several, not even sparing their wives. This was but a prelude to their barbarity : their savage cruelty was only whetted, not glutted. They took the surviving few, hurried and dragged them up a hill a little without the villa. On the top of this hill there was a hole, or opening,...
Page xv - Peterborough's parts were of too lively and mercurial a quality, and that his letters showed more wit than became a general ; a commonplace objection, raised by the dull malignity of common-place minds against those whom they see discharging with ease and indifference the tasks which they themselves execute (if at all) with the sweat of their brow, and in the heaviness of their heart. It is no uncommon error of judgment to maintain...
Page 235 - COURAGE and personal BRAVERY. Taken from her own Mouth when A Pensioner of Chelsea-Hospital, And known to be true by Many who were engaged in those great Scenes of ACTION. LONDON: Printed for and Sold by R. MONTAGU, at the BookWare-House, in Great Wylde- Street, 1740. PREFACE. IN the following life of Mrs. CHRISTIAN DAVIES, taken from her own mouth, we may remark examples of uncommon intrepidity but rarely found in the fair sex.
Page 237 - She was long before her death afflicted with a complication of distempers, as dropsy, scurvy, &c., at length her husband being taken ill, she would sit up with him at nights, by which she- contracted a cold that threw her into a continual fever, which carried her off in four days. She died on the 7th of July, 1739, and was interred in the burying-ground belonging to Chelsea Hospital, with military honours. THE LIFE AND ENTERTAINING ADVENTURES OF MRS, CHRISTIAN DAVIES, COMMONLY CALLED MOTHER HOSS.
Page 63 - The earl, however, having made his proper dispositions, and delivered out his orders, began his march in the evening, with twelve hundred foot and two hundred horse, which, of necessity, were to pass by the quarters of the prince of Hesse. That prince, on their appearance, was told that the general was come to speak with him ; and, being brought into his apartment, the earl acquainted him, that he had at last resolved upon an attempt against the enemy ; adding, that now, if he pleased, he might be...