| Henry Richard Fox Bourne - Great Britain - 1868 - 336 pages
...departeth out of this body, leaving behind it an everlasting fame, as a true soldier who hath done his duty as he was bound to do. But the others of my company...which they shall be reproached all their lives, and have a shameful name for ever."* That bitter condemnation was not quite undeserved. Had even two or... | |
| Louise Creighton - Great Britain - 1877 - 304 pages
...departeth out of this body, leaving behind it an everlasting fame, as a true soldier who hath done his duty as he was bound to do. But the others of my company...which they shall be reproached all their lives, and have a shameful name for ever." Grenville's condemnation does not seem to have been deserved by Lord... | |
| Henry Stewart (M.A.) - 1883 - 500 pages
...body, and shall always leave behind it an everlasting fame of a true soldier, who hath done his duty as he was bound to do. But the others of my company...which they shall be reproached all their lives, and have a shameful name for ever." It is evident that Sir Richard Grenville thought himself basely abandoned... | |
| Louise Creighton - Great Britain - 1883 - 382 pages
...everlasting fame, as a true soldier who hath done SIR WALTER RALEGH. Original Picture at Longleat. his duty as he was bound to do. But the others of my company...which they shall be reproached all their lives, and have a shameful name for ever." He could not forgive the other English ships for not having'joined... | |
| David Masson, George Grove, John Morley, Mowbray Morris - English periodicals - 1892 - 548 pages
...on the Spaniard's deck. But in Linschoten's version of the story the speech is said to end thus : " But the others of my company have done as traitors...which they shall be reproached all their lives, and have a shameful name for ever." This conclusion has been prudently omitted from all the English versions,... | |
| Sir George Grove, David Masson, John Morley, Mowbray Morris - 1892 - 524 pages
...version of the story the speech is said to end thus : •' But the others of my company have ilone as traitors and dogs, for which they shall be reproached all their lives, and have a shameful name for ever." This conclusion has been prudently omitted from all the English versions,... | |
| Roger Granville - England - 1895 - 632 pages
...questioned. In Linschoten's version of the story, Sir Richard's dying speech is said to have ended thus : " But the others of my company have done as traitors...which they shall be reproached all their lives and have a shameful name for ever." Thomas Phillippes, in a letter to Thomas Barnes, says, " they condemn... | |
| 1897 - 1080 pages
...body, and shall always leave behind it an everlasting fame of a true soldier, who hath done his duty as he was bound to do. But the others of my company...all their lives and leave a shameful name for ever" The early translators of Linschoten suppressed the last sentence, which yet is not the least significant... | |
| David Hannay - 1898 - 530 pages
...behind it an everlasting fame of a true i59i] FIGHT OF THE REVENGE 123 soldier, who hath done his duty as he was bound to do. But the others of my company...their lives, and leave a shameful name for ever." Linschoten was at that time a resident in the Islands, and may very well have had at least the substance... | |
| Louise Creighton - Great Britain - 1898 - 376 pages
...soldier who hath done public f&HSfiiSf SIR WALTER RALEIGH. Original Picture at Longleat. his duty as lie was bound to do. But the others of my company have...which they shall be reproached all their lives, and have a shameful name for ever." He could not forgive the other English ships for not having joined... | |
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