| Arthur Wellesley Duke of Wellington - 1838 - 736 pages
...affection I feel for him ; and you will readily believe how much concerned I am for his misfortune. Indeed, the losses I have sustained, have quite broken me...; and I have no feeling for the advantages we have acquired. I hope, however, that your brother will soon be able to join me again ; and that he will... | |
| Arthur Wellesley (1st duke of Wellington.) - 1838 - 760 pages
...affection I feel for him ; and you will readily believe how much concerned I am for his misfortune. Indeed, the losses I have sustained, have quite broken me...; and I have no feeling for the advantages we have acquired. I hope, however, that your brother will soon be able to join me again ; and that he will... | |
| sir James Edward Alexander - 1840 - 620 pages
...affection I feel for him; and you will readily believe how much concerned I am for his misfortune. Indeed, the losses I have sustained have quite broken me down; and I have no feeling for the advantages we have acquired."* We shall proceed in the next chapter to describe the progress of this victorious campaign... | |
| George Robert Gleig - 1847 - 326 pages
...affection I feel for him, and you will readily believe how much concerned I am for his misfortune. Indeed the losses I have sustained have quite broken me down, and I have no feeling for the advantages I have acquired." No wonder if he who thus wrote after the excitement of the battle was in some sort... | |
| Julius Charles Hare, Augustus William Hare - 1848 - 426 pages
...Bonaparte at Waterloo wrote on the day after, the 19th of June, to the Duke of Beaufort : " The losses we have sustained, have quite broken me down ; and I have no feeling for the advantages we have acquired." On the same day too he wrote to Lord Aberdeen : " I cannot express to you the regret and... | |
| Henry Wright Phillott - 1849 - 224 pages
...affection I feel for him ; and you will readily believe how much concerned I am for his misfortune. Indeed, the losses I have sustained have quite broken me down...; and I have no feeling for the advantages we have acquired. I hope, however, that your brother will soon be able to join me again ; and that he will... | |
| Mary Atkinson Maurice - 1853 - 322 pages
...I feel for him ; and you will readily believe how much concerned I am for his misfortune. " Indeed, the losses I have sustained have quite broken me down, and I have no feeling for the advantages we have acquired. I hope, however, that your brother will soon be able to join me again, and that he will long... | |
| 1853 - 566 pages
...affection I feel for him ; and you will readily believe how much concerned I am for his misfortune. Indeed, the losses I have sustained have quite broken me down...; and I have no feeling for the advantages we have acquired. I hope, however, that your brother will soon be able to join me again ; and that he will... | |
| lord William Pitt Lennox - 1853 - 294 pages
...affection I feel for him ; and you will readily believe how much concerned I am for his misfortune. Indeed, the losses I have sustained have quite broken me down...; and I have no feeling for the advantages we have acquired. I hope, however, that your brother will soon be able to join me again ; and that he will... | |
| 1853 - 576 pages
...affection I feel for him ; and you will readily believe how much concerned I am for his misfortune. Indeed, the losses I have sustained have quite broken me down...; and I have no feeling for the advantages we have acquired. I hope, however, that your brother will soon be able to join me again ; and that he will... | |
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