| Sir Theodore Martin - 1879 - 544 strani
...better example, which it is impossible to contemplate without a feeling of shame for one's countrymen. Not one man in ten seems to think that the hanging...otherwise than practicable and right; nor does it occur to those who talk and write most upon the matter, that for the Sovereign of England to hold and govern... | |
| Sir Theodore Martin - 1879 - 560 strani
...without a feeling of shame for cue's countrymen. Not one man in ten seems to think that the hanging aud shooting of forty or fifty thousand mutineers, besides...than practicable and right ; nor does it occur to those who talk and write most upon the matU-r, that for the Sovereign of England to hold and govern... | |
| Reginald Bosworth Smith - 1883 - 686 strani
...shame for one's countrymen. Not one man in ten seems to think that the hanging and shooting of forty to fifty thousand mutineers, besides other rebels, can...otherwise than practicable and right. Nor does it occur to those who talk and write most upon the matter, that for the Sovereign of England to hold and govern... | |
| Reginald Bosworth Smith - 1883 - 692 strani
...better example, which it is impossible to contemplate without a feeling of shame for one's countrymen. Not one man in ten seems to think that the hanging and shooting of forty to fifty thousand mutineers, besides other rebels, can be otherwise than practicable and right. Nor... | |
| Sir Spencer Walpole - 1890 - 504 strani
...murder." " There is," so he wrote to the queen, " a rabid and indiscriminate vindictiveness abroad ; . . . not one man in ten seems to think that the hanging and shooting of forty or 1 Holmes's History of Indian Mutiny, p. 124; History of Siege of Delhi, by an Officer who served, there,... | |
| Sir Henry Stewart Cunningham - 1891 - 256 strani
...abroad,' he wrote to the Queen in September, ' even among those who ought to set a better example. . . . Not one man in ten seems to think that the hanging and shooting of 40,000 or 50,000 men can be otherwise than practicable and right.' Excitement was excusable, for ever... | |
| Sir Henry Stewart Cunningham - 1892 - 246 strani
...abroad/ he wrote to the Queen in September, 'even among those who ought to set a better example. . . . Not one man in ten seems to think that the hanging and shooting of 40,000 or 50,000 men can be otherwise than practicable and right.' Excitement was excusable, for ever... | |
| Sir Henry Stewart Cunningham - 1899 - 252 strani
...abroad/ he wrote to the Queen in September, 'even among those who ought to set a better example. . . . Not one man in ten seems to think that the hanging and shooting of 40,000 or 50,000 men can be otherwise than practicable and right.' Excitement was excusable, for ever... | |
| Henry Smith Williams - 1904 - 702 strani
...judicial murder." "There is," so he wrote to the queen, "a rabid and indiscriminate vindictiveness abroad; not one man in ten seems to think that the hanging and shooting of forty or fifty thousand mutineers can be otherwise than practicable and right." I Fearful would have been the doom of the chief offender... | |
| John Law - 1912 - 326 strani
...a rabid and vindictive spirit abroad, even among Englishmen who ought to set a better example . . . not one man in ten seems to think that the hanging and shooting of 40,000 or 50,000 men can be otherwise than practicable and right.' On July 15, he wrote to Sir John... | |
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