Memoirs of Major-General Sir Henry Havelock, K.C.B. |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 40
Page 4
... remarked that the " most important part of the history of any man is his connection , through faith , with the invisible world . " So , of Henry Havelock , it may be recorded that there were early indi- cations of the stirring of the ...
... remarked that the " most important part of the history of any man is his connection , through faith , with the invisible world . " So , of Henry Havelock , it may be recorded that there were early indi- cations of the stirring of the ...
Page 6
... remarked , " Wal- pole , a grandson of Sir Robert , was first ; Hare second ; John Pindar third ; and Havelock fourth . It consisted of some thirty boys , and lower down in it were Connop Thirlwall , and Hinds . " In 1811 , Havelock ...
... remarked , " Wal- pole , a grandson of Sir Robert , was first ; Hare second ; John Pindar third ; and Havelock fourth . It consisted of some thirty boys , and lower down in it were Connop Thirlwall , and Hinds . " In 1811 , Havelock ...
Page 7
... remarked , " My Henry will one day sit on the bar . the woolsack . " On leaving the Charter House , he retired to Ingress Park , where he remained till the summer of 1812 , giving his time to the study of the classics and the ...
... remarked , " My Henry will one day sit on the bar . the woolsack . " On leaving the Charter House , he retired to Ingress Park , where he remained till the summer of 1812 , giving his time to the study of the classics and the ...
Page 13
... remarked that though he was anxious to contribute to the general cheerfulness of the party , he sought no intimacy except where he could receive or impart benefit . دو cutta . His as- The General Kyd reached Calcutta in May , 1823. The ...
... remarked that though he was anxious to contribute to the general cheerfulness of the party , he sought no intimacy except where he could receive or impart benefit . دو cutta . His as- The General Kyd reached Calcutta in May , 1823. The ...
Page 23
... remarked- Lieutenant “ Thus have I lost sight of one of the most singular and im- posing spectacles of barbaric strategy on record , in my absence , during the investment of Rangoon by the levée en masse Letter to of the Burmese empire ...
... remarked- Lieutenant “ Thus have I lost sight of one of the most singular and im- posing spectacles of barbaric strategy on record , in my absence , during the investment of Rangoon by the levée en masse Letter to of the Burmese empire ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
78th Highlanders action advance Affghan Affghanistan Akbar Khan Allahabad Alumbagh appointment army arrival artillery attack bank battery battle Bengal Bithoor body Bombay bridge brigade British Cabul Calcutta camp campaign cantonment Captain Broadfoot cavalry Cawnpore Charbagh chief Chillianwalla Colonel column command Commander-in-Chief considered corps defence Delhi despatch detachment Dinapore duty endeavoured enemy enemy's England European feeling Ferozepore fire force gallant garrison General's Government guns Gwalior Hardinge Havelock Henry Havelock Herat honour hope horse India infantry insurgents intrenchment Jellalabad letter Lieut Lord Lord Hardinge Lucknow Major ment miles military months morning Mungulwar mutiny Nana Sahib native Neill officers operations Oude Persian Peshawur placed position provinces rank reached rebels received regiment reinforcements remarked Residency retire revolt river sent Sepoys Serampore Sikhs Singh Sir Colin Sir Henry Sir James Outram Sir Robert Sale soldiers soon spirit success Sutlege tion town troops victory wounded wrote