Some Account of the Public Life of the Late Lieutenant-General Sir George Prevost, Bart., Particularly of His Services in the Canadas; Including a Reply to the Strictures on His Military Character, Contained in an Article in the Quarterly Review for October, 1822

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T. Cadell, 1823 - Canada - 296 pages
 

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Page 182 - I am to acquaint you, that his royal highness the prince regent has been pleased, in the name and on the behalf of his majesty, to approve and confirm the finding -and sentence of the court.
Page 71 - Such conduct being insubordinate, unbecoming the character of an officer and a gentleman, to the prejudice of good order and military discipline, and in breach of the articles of war.
Page 63 - Their block-house and stockaded battery could not be carried by assault, nor reduced by field-pieces, had we been provided with them : the fire of the gun-boats proved inefficient to attain that end — light and adverse winds continued, and our larger vessels were still far off.
Page 64 - ... a single soldier without the limits of his fortress. Your Excellency having been a witness of the zeal and ardent courage of every soldier in the field, it is unnecessary in me to assure your Excellency that but one sentiment animated every breast, that of discharging to the utmost of their power their duty to their King and country : — But one sentiment of regret and mortification prevailed, on being obliged to quit...
Page 67 - That the capture of his majesty's late squadron was caused by the very defective means Captain Barclay possessed to equip them on Lake Erie ; the want of a sufficient number of able seamen, whom he had repeatedly and earnestly requested of Sir James Yeo to be sent to him ; the very great superiority of force of the enemy to the British squadron ; and the unfortunate early fall of the superior officers in the action.
Page 58 - May it please Your Excellency, We, His Majesty's most dutiful and loyal Subjects the...
Page 70 - ... unbecoming and disgraceful to his character as an officer, prejudicial to good order and military discipline, and contrary to the articles of war.
Page 64 - He had set fire to the storehouses in the vicinity of the fort. Seeing no object within our reach to attain, that could compensate for the loss we were momentarily sustaining from the heavy fire of the enemy's cannon, I directed the troops to take up the position on the crest of the hill we had charged from.
Page 98 - I should consider my own fame, by gratifying the ardour of the troops in persevering in the attack, or consult the more substantial interests of my country, by withdrawing the army which was yet uncrippled, for the security of these provinces...

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