Whom Shall We Hang?: The Sebastopol InquiryJames Ridgway, 1855 - 315 pagina's |
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Pagina 7
... winter on the heights above the town ; and this prospect , as little answering the expectations of people at home as promising comfort to the men on the plateau , increased the growing dissatisfaction . Such was the state of the public ...
... winter on the heights above the town ; and this prospect , as little answering the expectations of people at home as promising comfort to the men on the plateau , increased the growing dissatisfaction . Such was the state of the public ...
Pagina 21
... Lord Cardigan , and the Duke of Cambridge - while to the only General Officer who had passed the entire winter on the spot , General Burgoyne , they did not address a single question on the subject . Did they desire to 21.
... Lord Cardigan , and the Duke of Cambridge - while to the only General Officer who had passed the entire winter on the spot , General Burgoyne , they did not address a single question on the subject . Did they desire to 21.
Pagina 27
... and the character of the information laid before them . No wonder that heaps of the idlest gossip were received without suspicion , and published without hesitation . which horrified and humiliated it last winter were true , 27.
... and the character of the information laid before them . No wonder that heaps of the idlest gossip were received without suspicion , and published without hesitation . which horrified and humiliated it last winter were true , 27.
Pagina 28
The Sebastopol Inquiry Sir Peter B. Maxwell. which horrified and humiliated it last winter were true , and how far the charges against Ministers were well or ill founded . These questions merit exami- nation ; for although much has been ...
The Sebastopol Inquiry Sir Peter B. Maxwell. which horrified and humiliated it last winter were true , and how far the charges against Ministers were well or ill founded . These questions merit exami- nation ; for although much has been ...
Pagina 38
... winter by the current , Sir Edmund Lyons would have found it no easy matter to penetrate into the Sea of Azof . † It has been said that the bold enterprise against the great fortress of Russia , was entered upon with- out sufficient ...
... winter by the current , Sir Edmund Lyons would have found it no easy matter to penetrate into the Sea of Azof . † It has been said that the bold enterprise against the great fortress of Russia , was entered upon with- out sufficient ...
Overige edities - Alles bekijken
Veelvoorkomende woorden en zinsdelen
3rd Rep Admiral Dundas Admiralty appears army arrived arrowroot assertion Balaklava battle of Inkermann biscuit camp Captain carried cavalry clothing coffee Commissariat Committee complaints Constantinople corps Crimea December defects deficiency departments depôt Division Duke of Cambridge Duke of Newcastle duty evidence evil examined Filder French fresh meat gentleman Government guns harbour horses Hosp Hospital Commissioners hospitals at Scutari imputed Inkermann inquiry Kamiesch Kertch Lacy Evans Layard linen Lord Aberdeen Lord Cardigan Lord Raglan means medical comforts medical officers ment military Minié rifles Minister Miss Nightingale mittee months neglect never Odessa opinion Ordnance Osborne patients port wine procured purveyor question rations regiments Roebuck Russian says Scutari Sebastopol sent ships Sidney Herbert siege Sir De Lacy Smith soldiers Stafford statement sufferings supply surgeons tents tion transport troops true truth Varna vessels waggons weeks winter witness
Populaire passages
Pagina 278 - Doth any man doubt, that if there were taken out of men's minds vain opinions, flattering hopes, false valuations, imaginations as one would, and the like, but it would leave the minds of a number of men poor shrunken things, full of melancholy and indisposition, and unpleasing to themselves...
Pagina 9 - Roebuck announced that he should move for the appointment of a select committee ' to inquire into the condition of our army before Sebastopol, and into the conduct of those departments of the Government whose duty it has been to minister to the wants of that army.
Pagina 32 - If orders to this effect have not already been given, ' it is further probable that such a measure would be ' adopted as soon as it is known that the Allied ' armies are in motion to commence active hostilities. ' As all communications by sea are now in the hands ' of the Allied Powers, it becomes of importance to ' endeavour to cut off all communication by land ' between the Crimea and the other parts of the
Pagina 257 - ... confinement on board ship, during which their wounds were not dressed. Out of the four wards committed to my charge, eleven men died in the night simply from exhaustion, which, humanly speaking, might have been stopped could I have laid my hands upon such nourishment as I know they ought to have had.
Pagina 31 - No blow which could be struck at the Southern extremities of the Russian Empire would be so effective for this purpose as the taking of Sebastopol.
Pagina 34 - I am to signify their directions to you to take every precaution in your power to prevent communication with the Crimea from ports in that direction. My Lords are further of opinion, that whenever the means at your disposal will admit, proper measures should be concerted with your colleagues in command of the allied forces, for obtaining an entrance by the Gulf of Kertch into the Sea of Azoff , with a view to interrupt the communications of the enemy with the eastern shores of the Crimea, to which...
Pagina 30 - Turkey in making careful but secret inquiry into the present amount and condition of the Russian force in the Crimea, and the strength of the fortress of Sebastopol. Your first duty will be to prevent, by every means in your power, the advance of the Russian army on Constantinople, if it should appear that there is any present serious intention of making such an attempt; but you must bear in mind that if...
Pagina 34 - I AM commanded by my Lords Commissioners of the Admiralty, with reference to the operations of the fleet under your orders, to call your special and particular attention to the necessity of exercising the utmost vigilance and care in preventing the movement of craft of all descriptions proceeding out of the Bay of Kherson and the River Dniester, and I am to signify their directions to you to take every precaution in your power to prevent communication with the Crimea from ports in that direction.