Annual Register, Volume 52Edmund Burke Longmans, Green, 1812 - History |
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... March , 1810 Quantity of Strong Beer brewed in London from the 5th of July , the bih of July , 1810 Appropriation of the British Supplies ibid . ibid . 414 416 417 419 ibid . .. 420 the 25th of 421 1809 , to ibid . .. 422 425 Prices of ...
... March , 1810 Quantity of Strong Beer brewed in London from the 5th of July , the bih of July , 1810 Appropriation of the British Supplies ibid . ibid . 414 416 417 419 ibid . .. 420 the 25th of 421 1809 , to ibid . .. 422 425 Prices of ...
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... march . If , said Lord St. Vincent , Sir John Moore had not acted ac- cording to his own judgment , in the perilous situation in which he had been wantonly exposed , every man of that army had been lost to the country . By his transcen ...
... march . If , said Lord St. Vincent , Sir John Moore had not acted ac- cording to his own judgment , in the perilous situation in which he had been wantonly exposed , every man of that army had been lost to the country . By his transcen ...
Page 13
... march , and encum < bered him with fresh difficultiesz That general , one of the best offi cers , and ablest men this country ever produced , in all he did , in all he wrote , in his life , and by his death , bore uniform testimony ...
... march , and encum < bered him with fresh difficultiesz That general , one of the best offi cers , and ablest men this country ever produced , in all he did , in all he wrote , in his life , and by his death , bore uniform testimony ...
Page 19
... march to Talavera was most im prudent . When that able officer , the gallant Sir John Moore , was entering Spain , he was told that a body of 10,000 men would com- pletely exhaust that part of the country of its provisions . The ge ...
... march to Talavera was most im prudent . When that able officer , the gallant Sir John Moore , was entering Spain , he was told that a body of 10,000 men would com- pletely exhaust that part of the country of its provisions . The ge ...
Page 20
... march to Talavera was his own act . He approved of it , and of the honours conferred on that gallant officer . We ought not to undervalue the hero's lau rels , even though they were bar ren . Mr. Whitbread said that Mr. Canning had ...
... march to Talavera was his own act . He approved of it , and of the honours conferred on that gallant officer . We ought not to undervalue the hero's lau rels , even though they were bar ren . Mr. Whitbread said that Mr. Canning had ...
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Common terms and phrases
Admiral amend appeared appointed army attack Badajoz bank Bank of England Bart batteries battle bill Britain British Buonaparte Cadiz Captain Ciudad Rodrigo Coimbra command committee conduct corps Cortes court daughter Ditto Duke duty Earl enemy England English expedition favour Ferdinand VII force French frigates gentlemen guns honourable House of Commons inhabitants inquiry Ireland island Isle Junta king Lady land late letter liberty Lisbon Lord Chatham Lord Wellington majesty majesty's March Massena ment military ministers Mondego motion nation navy neral o'clock object officers opinion paper parlia parliament party passed persons petition port Portugal Portuguese present Prince prisoners proceedings received Regency respect retreat royal Scheldt sent serjeant Serjeant at Arms ships sion Sir Francis Burdett Sir John Spain Spaniards Spanish Street Tagus tain taken Talavera tion town troops Walcheren whole William wounded
Popular passages
Page 398 - I die: remove far from me vanity and lies: give me neither poverty nor riches; feed me with food convenient for me: lest I be full, and deny thee, and say, "Who is the Lord?" or lest I be poor, and steal, and take the name of my God in vain.
Page 693 - The timid girls, half dreading their design, Dip the small foot in the retarded brine, And search for crimson weeds, which spreading flow, Or lie like pictures on the sand below; With all those bright red pebbles, that the sun Through the small waves so softly shines upon...
Page 417 - That the freedom of speech, and debates or proceedings in Parliament, ought not to be impeached or questioned in any court or place out of Parliament.
Page 264 - ... subversive of the rights of the whole body of electors of this kingdom.
Page 318 - What! shall the rascals dare to mutiny, and that too when the German Legion is so near at hand! Lash them, lash them, lash them! They deserve it. O yes; they merit a doubletailed cat. Base dogs ! What, mutiny for the sake of the price of a knapsack ! Lash them ! flog them ! Base rascals! mutiny for the price of a goat-skin, and then, upon the appearance of the German soldiers, they take a flogging as quietly as so many trunks of trees...
Page 699 - JEolian lyre The winds of dark November stray, Touch the quick nerve of every wire, And on its magic pulses play ; — Till all the air around, Mysterious murmurs fill, A strange bewildering dream of sound, Most heavenly sweet...
Page 686 - twas her proper care. Here will she come, and on the grave will sit, Folding her arms, in long abstracted fit ; But if observer pass, will take her round, And careless seem, for she would not be found ; Then go again, and thus her hour employ, While visions please her, and while woes destroy.
Page 694 - Ne'er made the mourner in his God rejoice? Is he not man, by sin and suffering tried? Is he not man, for whom the Saviour died? Belie the Negro's powers: — in headlong will, Christian! thy brother thou shalt prove him still: Belie his virtues; since his wrongs began, His follies and his crimes have stampt him Man.
Page 691 - tis done, Counts up his Meals, now lessen'd by that one ; For Expectation is on Time intent, Whether he brings us Joy or Punishment. - Yes ! e'en in sleep th* impressions all remain, He hears the Sentence and he feels the Chain ; He sees the Judge and Jury, when he shakes, And loudly cries, " Not Guilty," and awakes : Then chilling Tremblings o'er his Body creep, Till worn-out Nature is compell'd to sleep.
Page 258 - The evidence that there is a Being, all-powerful, wise, and good, by whom every thing exists ; and particularly, to obviate difficulties regarding the wisdom and goodness of the Deity ; and this, in the first place, from considerations independent of written revelation, and, in the second place, from the Revelation of the Lord Jesus ; and from the whole, to point out the inferences most necessary for and useful to mankind.