The Memoirs of Captain George Carleton: and The Life and Adventures of Mrs. Christian DaviesD. A. Talboys, 1840 - 418 pages |
From inside the book
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Page 2
... attack from us : but in regard the Charles man - of - war had been lost on those sands the war before , and that our ships drawing more water than those of the enemy , an engagement might be rendered very disadvantageous , it was ...
... attack from us : but in regard the Charles man - of - war had been lost on those sands the war before , and that our ships drawing more water than those of the enemy , an engagement might be rendered very disadvantageous , it was ...
Page 12
... attack , at the same time that it gave him a lesson of caution , to withdraw himself , as soon as he could , to his own troops . However , the day after the prince of Orange thought proper to march to Quarignan , a village within a ...
... attack , at the same time that it gave him a lesson of caution , to withdraw himself , as soon as he could , to his own troops . However , the day after the prince of Orange thought proper to march to Quarignan , a village within a ...
Page 15
... attacked . The disposition for the attack was thus ordered ; two serjeants with twenty grenadiers , a captain with fifty men , myself one of the number ; then a CAPTAIN CARLETON . 15.
... attacked . The disposition for the attack was thus ordered ; two serjeants with twenty grenadiers , a captain with fifty men , myself one of the number ; then a CAPTAIN CARLETON . 15.
Page 16
... attack itself . But well had it been had our ill fortune stopped there ; for as if disaster must needs be the concomitant of success , we soon lost what we had thus gotten , by a small , but very odd accident . Not being furnished with ...
... attack itself . But well had it been had our ill fortune stopped there ; for as if disaster must needs be the concomitant of success , we soon lost what we had thus gotten , by a small , but very odd accident . Not being furnished with ...
Page 17
... attack . At break of day the attack was begun with great resolution ; and though vigorously maintained , was attended with the desired success . The bastion was again taken , and in it the commanding officer , who in service to himself ...
... attack . At break of day the attack was begun with great resolution ; and though vigorously maintained , was attended with the desired success . The bastion was again taken , and in it the commanding officer , who in service to himself ...
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 244 - The Lord giveth, and the Lord ' taketh away ; blessed be the name of the Lord.
Page xvii - Knows every prince in Europe's face, Flies like a squib from place to place, And travels not, but runs a race. From Paris gazette a-la-main, This day arriv'd, without his train, Mordanto in a week from Spain. A messenger comes all a-reek Mordanto at Madrid to seek ; He left the town above a week.
Page 270 - Deinse; the governors of which places wanted courage to defend them, which puts me in mind of a proverb, that it is better to have a lion at the head of an army of sheep, than a sheep at the head of an army of lions.
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 xix - A fiery soul, which, working out its way, Fretted the pigmy body to decay, And o'er-informed the tenement of clay...
Page xxvi - Memoirs was born at Ewelme in Oxfordshire, descended from an ancient and an honourable family. The lord Dudley Carleton, who died secretaty of state to king Charles I., was his great uncle; and in the same reign his father was envoy at the court of Madrid, whilst his uncle, sir Dudley Carleton, was ambassador to the states of Holland; men in those days respected both for their abilities and loyalty.
Page xvi - MORDANTO fills the trump of fame", The christian worlds his deeds proclaim, And prints are crowded with his name. In journeys he outrides the post, Sits up till midnight with his host, Talks politics, and gives the toast.
Page 5 - There is a bravery of mind which I fancy few of those gentlemen duellists are possessed of. True courage cannot proceed from what Sir Walter Raleigh finely calls the art or philosophy of quarrel. No ! It must be the issue of principle, and can have no other basis than a steady tenet of religion.
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 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 DA VIES, taken from her own mouth, we may remark examples of uncommon intrepidity but rarely found in the fair sex.