Rough Notes of the Campaign in Sinde and Affghanistan, in 1838-9: Being Extracts from a Personal Journal Kept While on the Staff of the Army of the IndusJ.M. Richardson, 1840 - 262 頁 |
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17th Foot 17th Regiment Abdool advance Affghanistan Affghans Alexander Burnes Ameers arrived attack baggage Bamian bank Beloches Bengal Army boats Bolan Pass Bombay Bombay Artillery Brigade British Cabool Cabul camels Candahar Captain Peat Cavalry citadel Colonel column command Commander-in-Chief consequence Curachee deserted despatched detachment directed Dost Mahommed Khan encamping enemy Envoy and Minister escort Excellency file wounded fire forage fortress garrison gate Ghizni Ghuznee Governor-General Governor-General of India guns halt heights Herat hills Honourable Horse Artillery hundred India Indus jungle kafila Khan's Khelat killed Kojak Lieutenant Macnaghten Majesty Shah Shooja Majesty's Major Major-General Meer Mehrab Khan miles morning night occupied officers party pass plundered rank and file rear received river road route sent Shah Shooja ool Shah's Shikarpore Shooja ool Moolk side Sinde Sir John Keane Sirdars tamarisk to-morrow troops Turnuk valley village walls whilst whole Willoughby Cotton Willshire yesterday
熱門章節
第 198 頁 - The welfare of our possessions in the East requires that we should have on our Western frontier an ally who is interested in resisting aggression and establishing tranquillity, in the place of chiefs ranging themselves in subservience to a hostile power, and seeking to promote schemes of conquest and aggrandizement.
第 196 頁 - Governor-General could not, consistently with justice and his regard for the friendship of Maharajah Runjeet Singh, be the channel of submitting to the consideration of his Highness; that he avowed schemes of aggrandisement and ambition injurious to the security and peace of the frontiers of India ; and that he openly threatened, in furtherance of those schemes, to call in every foreign aid which he could command.
第 198 頁 - M'Neill, Her Majesty's Envoy, that his Excellency has been compelled, by a refusal of his just demands, and by a systematic course of disrespect adopted towards him by the Persian Government, to quit the Court of the Shah, and to make a public declaration of the cessation of all intercourse between the two Governments. The necessity under which Great Britain is placed of regarding the present advance of the Persian arms into Afghanistan as an act of hostility towards herself, has also been officially...
第 250 頁 - Queen has also been pleased to direct Letters Patent to be passed under the Great Seal, granting the dignity of a...
第 197 頁 - ... injurious to the security and peace of the frontiers of India; and that he openly threatened, in furtherance of those schemes, to call in every foreign aid which he could command. Ultimately, he gave his undisguised support to the Persian designs in...
第 197 頁 - The Governor-General deems it in this place necessary to revert to the siege of Herat, and the conduct of the Persian nation. The siege of that city has now been carried on by the Persian army for many months. The attack upon it was a most unjustifiable and cruel aggression, perpetrated and continued, notwithstanding the solemn and repeated remonstrances of the British...
第 240 頁 - I have the honour to report that on my arrival at Quetta on the 31st ultimo, I communicated with Captain Bean the political agent in Shawl, and arranged with him the best means of giving effect to the orders I had received.
第 196 頁 - Raja, with the characteristic confidence which he has uniformly placed in the faith and friendship of the British nation...
第 196 頁 - Maharajah would not be slow to avenge this aggression ; and it was to be feared that the flames of war being once kindled in the very regions into which we were endeavouring to extend our commerce, the peaceful and beneficial purposes of the British government would be altogether frustrated.
第 207 頁 - Lord,—I have the satisfaction to acquaint your Lordship, that the Army under my command have succeeded in performing one of the most brilliant acts, it has ever been my lot to witness, during my service of 45 years in the four quarters of the globe, in the capture by storm of the strong and important fortress and citadel of Ghuznee yesterday.