Insurrection Poland in 1830-31: And the Russian Rule Preceding it Since 1815James Ridgway, 1839 - 415 ページ |
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Alexander amongst arms arrived artillery attack Austria autocrat battalions battle Bolimow bridge Brzesc Litewski cannon capital cavalry chaussée Chlapowski Chlopicki Chrzanowski Colonel command commenced Constantine constitutional corps council Czar declared Dembinski deputies Dictator dictatorship Diebitch Diet Duchy Duchy of Warsaw Dwernicki emperor empire endeavoured enemy Europe existence favour force Galicia Gielgud Grand Duke Grochow guard honour independence infantry insurgents insurrection insurrectionize joined king kingdom Kiow Kosciuszko Kreutz Krukowiecki Lelewel liberty Lithuanians Lomza Lubecki ment military Mochnacki Modlin Muscovy Napoleon Narew nation negociations Nicholas Niemoiowski noble Novosilzoff officers once Ostrolenka palatinate palatinate of Lublin party Paszkiewicz patriots Petersburgh Podolia Poland Poles Polish army Polish troops Praga Prince Czartoryski prisoners Prondzynski provinces Ramorino regiments rendered retired retreat Rozycki Rudiger Russian Samogitia Sclavonian sent Siedlce Skrzynecki soldiers squadrons sword Tatar tion ukase Ukraina victory Vilno Vistula Volhynia Warsaw whilst words Wysocki Zamosc Zamoyski
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112 ページ - Between the acting of a dreadful thing And the first motion, all the interim is Like a phantasma, or a hideous dream : The genius, and the mortal instruments, Are then in council; and the state of man, Like to a little kingdom, suffers then The nature of an insurrection.
237 ページ - Poland for ever" reached the walls of Warsaw to cheer the hearts of its anxious inhabitants. So terrible was the fire of that day, that in the Polish army there was not a single general or staff officer who had not his horse killed or wounded under him; two-thirds of the officers, and, perhaps, of the soldiers, had their clothes pierced with balls, and more than a tenth part of the army were wounded. Thirty thousand Russians and ten thousand Poles were left on the field of battle ; rank upon rank...
387 ページ - Krukowiecki écrivit au tsar la lettre suivante : « Sire, chargé dans ce moment même du pouvoir de parler à Votre Majesté impériale et royale au nom de la nation polonaise , je m'adresse, par son excellence mpnseigneur le comte Paskevitsch d'Erivan , à votre cœur paternel.
23 ページ - And me, too," he exclaimed, in an oratorical movement which electrified the Assembly, " and me, too, they would, some days since, have borne in triumph, and now they cry through the streets — ' The great conspiracy of Count Mirabeau.' I needed not this lesson to know that there is but a step from the Capitol to the Tarpeian rock.
i ページ - ... perque undas superante salo perque invia saxa dispulit: hue pauci vestris adnavimus oris. quod genus hoc hominum? quaeve hunc tam barbara morem permittit patria? hospitio prohibemur harenae; 540 bella cient primaque vetant consistere terra. si genus humanum et mortalia temnitis arma, at sperate deos memores fandi atque nefandi.
147 ページ - Je recommande de même tous les établissements, propriétés et individus à la protection de la nation polonaise, et les mets sous la sauvegarde de la foi la plus sacrée.
13 ページ - Europe should result from the union of Poland with the Russian empire, already so powerful — a danger which would not be imaginary, if the military force of the two countries should ever be united under the command of an ambitious and warlike monarch.
267 ページ - Notwithstanding this immense havoc, the population still renewed itself upon that beautiful soil, ' cut up,' as says a Sclavonian poet, ' by the tramp of horses, fertilized by human blood, and white with bones, where sorrow grew abundantly,'— and that population, like the soil, never ceased to be Sclavonian.
147 ページ - Je permets aux troupes polonaises, qui sont restees fideles jusqu'au dernier moment aupres de moi, de rejoindre les leurs. Je me mets en marche avec les troupes imperiales...
13 ページ - Warsaw, can^have left no doubt in the mind of the allied powers, that the re-establishment of Poland as an independent State, with a national administration of its own, would have fully accomplished the wishes of his Imperial Majesty ; and that he would even have been willing to make the greatest sacrifice to promote the restoration of that ancient and beneficial arrangement.