Narrative of the Expedition which Sailed from England in 1817, to Join the South American Patriots: Comprising Every Particular Connected with Its Formation, History, and Fate; with Observations and Authentic Information Elucidating the Real Character of the Contest, Mode of Warfare, State of the Armies, &cJ. Murray, 1818 - 144 páginas |
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Página iv
... nature purely disinterested in- duced individuals to engage in an enter- prise so hazardous and remote ; but al- though my principal reason for accepting a commission in the service of the South Ame- rican Patriots , was a sanguine hope ...
... nature purely disinterested in- duced individuals to engage in an enter- prise so hazardous and remote ; but al- though my principal reason for accepting a commission in the service of the South Ame- rican Patriots , was a sanguine hope ...
Página 18
... nature of this mari- time frolic is well known ; but a description of the manner in which it was celebrated upon the present occasion will be perhaps excusable , as serving to vary the monoto- nous character of a sea journal . Had our ...
... nature of this mari- time frolic is well known ; but a description of the manner in which it was celebrated upon the present occasion will be perhaps excusable , as serving to vary the monoto- nous character of a sea journal . Had our ...
Página 23
... regiments , and were By their first arrival in the West Indies , being particularly cooling , and by many also considered of an antifebrile nature . received with every mark of distinction . and respect ; SOUTH AMERICA . 23.
... regiments , and were By their first arrival in the West Indies , being particularly cooling , and by many also considered of an antifebrile nature . received with every mark of distinction . and respect ; SOUTH AMERICA . 23.
Página 28
... visions in exchange for a cargo of mules then on board . She was proceeding from the Main to Trinadad , when she fell in with the Spanish cruizer ; and , on inspection of her papers , the nature of the traffic in which 28 EXPEDITION TO.
... visions in exchange for a cargo of mules then on board . She was proceeding from the Main to Trinadad , when she fell in with the Spanish cruizer ; and , on inspection of her papers , the nature of the traffic in which 28 EXPEDITION TO.
Página 29
... nature of the traffic in which she had been engaged being unhappily dis- covered , the sanguinary captain of the royalist brig considered the offence of suf- ficient magnitude to justify the above bar- barous proceeding . To devise some ...
... nature of the traffic in which she had been engaged being unhappily dis- covered , the sanguinary captain of the royalist brig considered the offence of suf- ficient magnitude to justify the above bar- barous proceeding . To devise some ...
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Términos y frases comunes
amongst anchor anxiety appeared armies arrival at Saint ashore Azores Bassterre Bay of Biscay Beachy Head board the Britannia boat Bolivar Brion British officers Captain Sharpe ceeded character circumstances Colonel Campbell Colonel Gilmore Colonel Hippesley's Colonel Wilson consequence considered continued corps Cromoni departure destitute Don Mendez Dowson embarked on board Emerald engage England enterprise excited experienced favour Fayal feelings fortune Gravesend Grenada Gustavia harbour hazard honour hopes Hornby hostility Hudson immediately Independent Indian induced JAMES HACKETT likewise lomew's Marygott ment military morning native nature nearly night non-commissioned officers o'clock observed Oroonoco particular parties parture point of sailing portmanteaus possess proceed proceeded to Saint procure received regiment rendered respect Ritchie Royalists sailed Saint Bartho Saint Bartholomew's Saint Kitt's Saint Thomas's schooner ship shore shortly similar situation South American Patriots Spanish Main spect Supercargo tion Ushant vessel weather West Indies whilst wind
Pasajes populares
Página 47 - ... exterminating principle upon which it had been conducted, the country in general displayed one uniform scene of devastation and wretchedness ; that the Patriot forces were reduced to a state of the greatest poverty, totally devoid of discipline, and not one-fourth provided with proper military arms, the remainder being compelled to resort to bludgeons, knives, and such other weapons as they found most readily procurable. " In clothing they were still more destitute and deficient, in most instances...
Página 47 - ... when hardened by the sun's heat, they again render pliant by immersion in the first stream at which they chance to arrive. A blanket, with a hole cut in the middle, let over the head, and tightened round the body by a buffalo thong, has been frequently the dress of the officers; and one of them who witnessed the fact, assured me, that suchwas actually the uniform of a British colonel (R ) who was at that time in the Independent service.
Página 50 - ... as could be procured, they departed. The armies retired to other parts of the country, and the officer was fast recovering from the effects of his wound, when General Morillo, advancing upon the same route, discovered his retreat, and had him instantly put to death.
Página 48 - ... barefooted and in rags, provided •with such splendid uniforms as we had been obliged to procure ; and ridiculed the strange contrast which our dresses and those of the Patriots would exhibit in the field ; observing, that such clothes would be alone sufficient to excite the jealousy of the natives, to whose eagerness for their possession, we should almost inevitably become a sacrifice.
Página 44 - ... newspaper office. The armourer afterwards returned to Saint Bartholomew's with the intention of proceeding to New Orleans. The fate of the remainder I never learned, but fear their distresses must have been great, as they appeared totally destitute of money, and were consequently dependent for their subsistence on the manual exercise of their respective arts. ' Some of the officers succeeded in providing for themselves, either through their own resources, or pecuniary aid from friends; the remainder,...
Página 47 - ... remainder being compelled to resort to bludgeons, knives, and such other weapons as they found most readily procurable. In clothing they were still more destitute and deficient, in most instances merely consisting of fragments of coarse cloth wrapt round their bodies, and pieces of the raw buffalo hide laced over their feet as a substitute for shoes, which when hardened by the sun's heat, they again render pliant by immersion in the first stream at which they chance to arrive.
Página 50 - ... stain upon the Spanish American Revolution. The engagement is scarcely ended, when an indiscriminate massacre of the prisoners takes place ; nor is the slaughter only confined to the captives, the field also undergoes an inspection, when the helpless wounded are in like manner put to the sword.
Página 50 - In this action, a young French officer, in the service of the Independents, had his arm severed from his shoulder by a sabre cut, and being unable to sustain himself from loss of blood, he sunk to the ground. His distinguished bravery had however previously been observed by his companions, who succeeded in bearing him off the field, from whence they conveyed him into the woods, and sheltered him in a negro hut; where having applied such balsams as could be procured, they departed. The armies retired...
Página 24 - ... commanding the different corps, who had become so perfectly disunited as scarcely to observe towards each other the common forms of personal recognition. This want of harmony among the superior officers destroyed all exertions for the general cause ; and the Colonels, instead of evincing a solicitude to forward the views and realize, as far as lay in their power, the expectations they had excited in the minds of their followers, appeared to be influenced solely by an anxiety for personal precedency....
Página 46 - The information received from the officers to whom I have just referred, was to the following purport: They assured us, that in consequence of the extended duration of the war, and exterminating principle upon which it had been conducted, the country in general displayed one uniform scene of devastation and wretchedness. That the patriot forces were reduced to a state of the greatest poverty, totally devoid of discipline, and not one-fourth provided with proper military arms, the remainder being...