Colburn's United Service Magazine and Naval Military Journal, Volume 124; Volume 1870, Issue 3H. Colburn, 1870 - Military art and science |
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Page 32
... Government , for the suppression of the different gangs of miscreants which infested the country . To myself , however , the adventure proved the reverse of agreeable , as it was not till nearly two months afterwards , that I altogether ...
... Government , for the suppression of the different gangs of miscreants which infested the country . To myself , however , the adventure proved the reverse of agreeable , as it was not till nearly two months afterwards , that I altogether ...
Page 39
... Government . No country on earth has so much to gain from the employ- ment and adaptation of torpedoes as Great Britain . Our rivers are invariably small and such as to faciliate the laying down of submarine explosives . This should be ...
... Government . No country on earth has so much to gain from the employ- ment and adaptation of torpedoes as Great Britain . Our rivers are invariably small and such as to faciliate the laying down of submarine explosives . This should be ...
Page 41
... Government , and it is to be hoped that these will not be neglected when peace shall have been re- established ; but , above all , the security of our fleets in defensive as well as offensive operations , as regards torpedoes or ...
... Government , and it is to be hoped that these will not be neglected when peace shall have been re- established ; but , above all , the security of our fleets in defensive as well as offensive operations , as regards torpedoes or ...
Page 82
... Government interference , and esteem no system of instruction , internal arrangement , or supervision to be an improvement on that now in use - in other words , ignorance , and independance . The day may come , as we said before , when ...
... Government interference , and esteem no system of instruction , internal arrangement , or supervision to be an improvement on that now in use - in other words , ignorance , and independance . The day may come , as we said before , when ...
Page 83
... Government require- ments ; but the minority clog the machine , and for a battalion to become thoroughly efficient , that is , fairly good at parade work of all kinds , and to understand camp work , is most expensive , and entails a ...
... Government require- ments ; but the minority clog the machine , and for a battalion to become thoroughly efficient , that is , fairly good at parade work of all kinds , and to understand camp work , is most expensive , and entails a ...
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Popular passages
Page 91 - By the grace of God and the national will, Emperor of the French...
Page 41 - The invention all admired, and each how he To be the inventor missed ; so easy it seemed Once found, which yet unfound most would have thought Impossible.
Page 402 - The consequence, therefore, of the conquest of India by the British arms would be, in place of raising, to debase the whole people. There is perhaps no example of any conquest in which the Natives have been so completely excluded from all share of the government of their country as in British India.
Page 383 - His Royal Highness the Prince Regent has been pleased, in the name and on the behalf of His Majesty, to approve and confirm the finding and sentence of the Court.
Page 85 - Soldiers ! —I am about to place myself at your head to defend the honour and soil of the country. You go to fight against one of the best armies in Europe ; but others who were quite as worthy were unable to resist your bravery. It will be the same again at the present time. The war which is now commencing will be a long and severe one, since it will have for the scene of its operations places full of fortresses and obstacles ; but nothing is too difficult for the soldiers of Africa, the Crimea,...
Page 236 - By the struggling moonbeam's misty light And the lantern dimly burning. No useless coffin enclosed his breast, Not in sheet nor in shroud we wound him ; But he lay like a warrior taking his rest, With his martial cloak around him.
Page 209 - The two corps at the distance of about one hundred yards fired reciprocally a few rounds, when, as if by mutual agreement, the firing was suspended, and in close compact order and awful silence, they advanced towards each other, until their bayonets began to cross. At this momentous crisis the enemy became appalled. They broke, and endeavoured to fly, but it was too late; they were overtaken with the most dreadful slaughter.
Page 583 - Behold, we are servants this day, and as for the land that thou gavest unto our fathers to eat the fruit thereof and the good thereof, behold, we are servants in it. And it yieldeth much increase unto the kings whom thou hast set over us because of our sins : also they have power over our bodies, and over our cattle, at their pleasure, and we are in great distress.
Page 382 - Linnet, and to see our gunboats seeking their safety in flight. This unlooked-for event deprived me of the cooperation of the fleet, without which the further prosecution of the service was become impracticable. I did not hesitate to arrest the course of the troops advancing to the attack, because the most complete success would have been unavailing, and the possession of the enemy's...
Page 402 - No elevation of character can be expected among men who, in the military line, cannot attain to any rank above that of subahdar, where they are as much below an ensign as an ensign is below the commander-in-chief, and who, in the civil line, can hope for nothing beyond some petty judicial or revenue office, in which they may, by corrupt means, make up their slender salary.