The Edinburgh Annual Register, for 1808-26, Volume 7J. Ballantyne and Company, 1816 - Europe |
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Page vi
... occupy Geneva , and advance into France . The Russians pass the Rhine near Rastadt , and Blucher crosses it in three Places . The Allies force the Defiles of the Vogesean Mountains . Take Langres and Nancy . Are repulsed from Lyons ...
... occupy Geneva , and advance into France . The Russians pass the Rhine near Rastadt , and Blucher crosses it in three Places . The Allies force the Defiles of the Vogesean Mountains . Take Langres and Nancy . Are repulsed from Lyons ...
Page vii
... occupied by the Allies . Buonaparte's Project for Pacification is rejected , and the Conferences at Chatillon are broken off . Buonaparte endeavours to render the War national , and to draw together the Garrisons on the Rhine . He ...
... occupied by the Allies . Buonaparte's Project for Pacification is rejected , and the Conferences at Chatillon are broken off . Buonaparte endeavours to render the War national , and to draw together the Garrisons on the Rhine . He ...
Page 11
rule , if there be one part of the conti- nent occupied by France , to which we might be justified in looking with pe- culiar interest , with something like paternal concern , it would be for the re - establishment of the independence ...
rule , if there be one part of the conti- nent occupied by France , to which we might be justified in looking with pe- culiar interest , with something like paternal concern , it would be for the re - establishment of the independence ...
Page 18
... occupied by others : but , without ex- plaining himself more particularly , he might be allowed to say , that there were points of the utmost consequence to this country , both in a commercial and political view , where a corps of 10 ...
... occupied by others : but , without ex- plaining himself more particularly , he might be allowed to say , that there were points of the utmost consequence to this country , both in a commercial and political view , where a corps of 10 ...
Page 19
... position on the frontiers of France which our army now occupied . We should have been shut up within the bounds of our insular policy , and we ed to He wished merely to give such a due 6 CHAP . 1. ] 19 HISTORY OF EUROPE .
... position on the frontiers of France which our army now occupied . We should have been shut up within the bounds of our insular policy , and we ed to He wished merely to give such a due 6 CHAP . 1. ] 19 HISTORY OF EUROPE .
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Common terms and phrases
Adour allies appeared arms army arrived artillery attack bill Blucher brigade Britain British Buonaparte Captain cavalry charge Cochrane Colonel command conduct corps coun court crown defend detachment Duke duty Earl effect enemy enemy's Europe exertions favour feelings fire force Fort Erie France French frigate grand guard guns honour hope horses House inhabitants Ireland King of Denmark King of Prussia King of Sweden kingdom land Lieut Lieutenant Lord Lord Castlereagh Lord Cochrane lordship loss Louis XVIII Majesty the King majesty's Major-General Marshal ment military militia ministers morning Napoleon nation neral night Norway o'clock occasion officers Paris parliament party peace persons possession present Prince Regent Princess of Wales prisoners proposed received regiment respect retreat river Royal Highness sent ship sion sovereigns Sweden tain tion town treaty troops vessels whole wish wounded
Popular passages
Page 131 - Resolved, that an humble address be presented to His Royal Highness the Prince Regent, that he will be graciously pleased to give directions...
Page 17 - An act to enable his Majesty to accept the services of a proportion of the militia of the city of London, out of the united kingdom, for the vigorous prosecution of the war.
Page 58 - Nort'i moved in the House of Commons for leave to bring in a bill "for the better regulating the government of the Province of Massachusetts Bay.
Page cccxlv - In the Name of the Most Holy and Undivided Trinity. His Majesty the King of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, and His Majesty the Emperor of All the Russias...
Page cclx - I have the honour to acquaint you, for the information of my Lords Commissioners of the Admiralty, that at 5 o'clock PM on the 6th of August last, in latitude 24° 44
Page lxxxvii - It is not however the grandeur of military success, which has alone fixed our admiration or commanded our applause; it has been that generous and lofty spirit which inspired your troops with unbounded confidence, and taught them to know, that the day of battle was always a day of victory; that moral courage and enduring fortitude which, in perilous times when gloom and doubt had beset ordinary minds, stood nevertheless unshaken ; and that ascendancy of character, which uniting the energies of jealous...
Page ccclxxiv - An act for continuing to his Majesty certain duties on malt, sugar, tobacco, and snuff, in Great Britain ; and on pensions, offices, and personal estates, in England; for the service of the year 1816.
Page cxxii - Far in the bosom of the deep, O'er these wild shelves my watch I keep; A ruddy gem of changeful light, Bound on the dusky brow of night, The seaman bids my lustre hail, And scorns to strike his timorous. sail.
Page cccvi - Thornton, esq., his envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary to his majesty the king of Sweden ; .and his majesty the king of Sweden...
Page ccclxx - Revolutionary struggle defeated his unrighteous projects. His threats and his barbarities, instead of dismay, will kindle in every bosom an indignation not to be extinguished but in the disaster and expulsion of such cruel invaders.