The Life and Adventures, Songs, Services, and Speeches of Private Miles O'Reilly [pseud.] (47th Regiment, New York Volunteers.) |
From inside the book
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Page i
... Honor is the Private's Station . " With Comic Illustrations by Mullen . FROM THE AUTHENTIC RECORDS OF THE NEW YORK HERALD . NEW YORK : CARLETON , PUBLISHER , 413 BROADWAY . MDCCCLXIV . HM . NEW YOR THE NEW YORK PUBLIC LIBRARY 762910 A ...
... Honor is the Private's Station . " With Comic Illustrations by Mullen . FROM THE AUTHENTIC RECORDS OF THE NEW YORK HERALD . NEW YORK : CARLETON , PUBLISHER , 413 BROADWAY . MDCCCLXIV . HM . NEW YOR THE NEW YORK PUBLIC LIBRARY 762910 A ...
Page 17
... honors - honors with his whole heart and soul . How I should have felt if in the Weehawken , commanded by John Rodgers , who had the post of honor in the van , I do not know ; but suppose that pride and the busy sense of duty and ...
... honors - honors with his whole heart and soul . How I should have felt if in the Weehawken , commanded by John Rodgers , who had the post of honor in the van , I do not know ; but suppose that pride and the busy sense of duty and ...
Page 37
... honor is the highest prize for which our soldiers and sailors are contending . But beyond doubt there cannot be so much smoke without fire ; and it is for the best interests of both branches of the service that each should know the ...
... honor is the highest prize for which our soldiers and sailors are contending . But beyond doubt there cannot be so much smoke without fire ; and it is for the best interests of both branches of the service that each should know the ...
Page 65
... honor , Who to thry his hand in a little free fight divarsion was niver in the laste bit lothe . V. Och , here's Watherberry , Who's sore - headed — very , Thryin ' hard to bolsther up Governor Saymour's shpine ; An ' there's Harry ...
... honor , Who to thry his hand in a little free fight divarsion was niver in the laste bit lothe . V. Och , here's Watherberry , Who's sore - headed — very , Thryin ' hard to bolsther up Governor Saymour's shpine ; An ' there's Harry ...
Page 86
... honor to its Colonel , as a testimonial of our sympathy with a sentiment which made him refuse to parade an Irish regiment in honor of the Prince of Wales . ( Cheers . ) He was selected to preside on that occasion , probably , from the ...
... honor to its Colonel , as a testimonial of our sympathy with a sentiment which made him refuse to parade an Irish regiment in honor of the Prince of Wales . ( Cheers . ) He was selected to preside on that occasion , probably , from the ...
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Common terms and phrases
Admiral Du Pont aginst Anson Herrick army banquet bouchal dhas cruithin boys Brady Broadway Railroad Butler caucus Charles O'Conor Charleston Chase cloth bound Colonel command dear dhas cruithin amoe eyes Father Murphy Fernando Wood fight fire flag Fort Sumter Forty-seventh regiment gallant Gideon Gillmore give Greek fire Griese guest guns Gustavus W hands hear heart honor interest Irish iron-clads James O'Reilly John Judge Lincoln Lobby League Lord Lyons Lord Palmerston Loud applause Loud cheers Loud cries Loud laughter Luke Clark machines Meagher ment Monitors Morris Island Mozart navy never O'Kane O'Reilly's officers Oliver Charlick ould Admiral party pass political present President Davis Private Miles O'Reilly Private O'Reilly regiment New York right stripe Rodgers Sambo Seward Shaffer sing soldiers song South SPEECH Sub-committee Sumter Tammany there's things thrue tion verses vessels vote Washington words Yankee York Volunteers
Popular passages
Page 70 - To the flag we are pledged, all its foes we abhor, And we ain't for the nigger, but we are for the war.
Page 55 - I'll divide wid him, An' divil a word I'll say. In battle's wild commotion I shouldn't at all object If Sambo's body should stop a ball That was comin...
Page 56 - I'll resign, and let Sambo take it, On every day in the year! On every day in the year, boys, And wid none of your nasty pride, All my right in a Southern bagnet prod Wid Sambo I'll divide. The men who object to Sambo Should take his place and fight; And it's better to have a naygur's hue Than a liver that's wake an
Page 55 - And that the thrade of bein' kilt Belongs but to the white : But as for me, upon my sowl ! So liberal are we here, I'll let Sambo be murthered instead of myself, On every day in the year. On every day in the year, boys, And in every hour of the day • The right to be kilt I'll divide wid him, And divil a word I'll say.
Page 61 - An* whin you lie wid the top of aich toe Turned up to the roots of a daisy, May this be your epitaph, nately writ — • " Though thraitors abused him vilely, He was honest an...
Page 156 - And the other eye was out, my dear; And the calves of his wicked-looking legs Were more than two feet about, my dear.
Page 155 - O'Reilly is a brawny, large-boned, rather good-looking young Milesian, with curly reddish hair, grey eyes, one of which has a blemish upon it, high cheek bones, a cocked nose, square lower jaws, and the usual strong type of Irish forehead — the perceptive bumps, immediately above the eyes, being extremely prominent.
Page 235 - And order them, in language full, At once to send me down a bull : — If possible, a youthful beast, With warm affections yet unplaced, Who to my widowed cows may prove A husband of undying love.