Forty-one Years in India: From Subaltern to Commander-in-chief, 1±Ç

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465 ÆäÀÌÁö - The Crown of England stands forth the unquestioned ruler and paramount power in all India, and is for the first time brought face to face with its feudatories. There is a reality in the suzerainty of the Sovereign of England which has never existed before, and which is not only felt but eagerly acknowledged by the Chiefs.
422 ÆäÀÌÁö - the British Government would be guilty in the sight of God and man if it were any longer to aid in sustaining by its countenance an administration fraught with suffering to millions.
30 ÆäÀÌÁö - When Lieutenant Roberts arrived at Peshawar, Colonel Mackeson was the commissioner or chief civil officer. "He was," wrote Lord Dalhousie, "the beau ideal of a soldier — cool to conceive, brave to dare, and strong to do.
250 ÆäÀÌÁö - My own feeling on the subject is one of sorrow that such a brilliant soldier should have laid himself open to so much adverse criticism. Moreover, I do not think that, under any circumstances, he should have done the deed himself, or ordered it to be done in that summary manner, unless there had been evident signs of an attempt at a rescue.
136 ÆäÀÌÁö - Sing and, waving him back with an authoritative air, prevent him from leaving the room. The rest of the company then passed out, and when they had gone, Nicholson said to Lake : ' Do you see that General Mehtab Sing has his shoes on ?'* Lake replied that he had noticed the fact, but tried to excuse it.
94 ÆäÀÌÁö - I am not so much surprised/ he wrote to Lord Canning, ' at their objections to the cartridges, having seen them. I had no idea they contained, or rather are smeared with such a quantity of grease, which looks exactly like fat. After ramming down the ball, the muzzle of the musket is covered with it.
221 ÆäÀÌÁö - ... they got a gun to bear from a hole broken open in the long curtain wall; they sent rockets from one of their martello towers, and they maintained a perfect storm of musketry from their advanced trench, and from the city walls.
255 ÆäÀÌÁö - In the name of outraged humanity ; in memory of innocent blood ruthlessly shed, and in acknowledgment of the first signal vengeance inflicted upon the foulest treason, the Governor-General in Council records his gratitude to Major-General Wilson and the brave army of Delhi.
387 ÆäÀÌÁö - Oudh, which has scarcely been in our possession two years, than to recover our older possessions. Every eye in India is upon Oudh, as it was upon Delhi. Oudh is not only the rallying-place of the sepoys, — the place to which they all look, and by the doings in which their own hopes and prospects rise or fall, — but it represents a dynasty : there is a King of Oudh seeking his own.
101 ÆäÀÌÁö - ... every turn and corner of them, would, it appears to me, be in a very dangerous position. And if six or seven hundred were disabled, what would remain ? Could we hold it with the whole country armed against us ? Could we either stay in or out of it ? My own view of the state of things now is...

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