Napoleon the Gaoler: Personal Experiences and Adventures of British Sailors and Soldiers During the Great Captivity"This century has seen the Centenary of the release of Napoleon's British Prisoners of War." "...between 1803 and 1814...the British prisoners numbered fewer than 12,000, and of these, speaking generally, more than a third were merchantman officers and sailors captured at sea by French frigates and privateers." -- preface and introduction. |
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Page 36
... continued . Henceforward he laid down : " Ils ne doivent pas être aussi bien traités que les troupes . " Orders were issued thereupon to curtail supplies of all kinds , and deal with the British soldiers and sailors more economically ...
... continued . Henceforward he laid down : " Ils ne doivent pas être aussi bien traités que les troupes . " Orders were issued thereupon to curtail supplies of all kinds , and deal with the British soldiers and sailors more economically ...
Page 43
... continued all night ! The sums of money lost by the English were considerable . Many lost a thousand pounds , others more . Not only men of fortune , but Lieutenants of the Navy , midshipmen , and masters of merchant vessels were led ...
... continued all night ! The sums of money lost by the English were considerable . Many lost a thousand pounds , others more . Not only men of fortune , but Lieutenants of the Navy , midshipmen , and masters of merchant vessels were led ...
Page 51
... continued its journey , “ he had the drawbridge let down and the gates opened to let the Legion pass through before the English prisoners could see and have light to contemplate our green flag and its beatific inscription , so obnoxious ...
... continued its journey , “ he had the drawbridge let down and the gates opened to let the Legion pass through before the English prisoners could see and have light to contemplate our green flag and its beatific inscription , so obnoxious ...
Page 97
... provisions , and water , for the voyage . " The boat was to have returned , with some implements of Navigation ; but a squall came on , and continued to blow so hard ; that , we lost sight of 7 TEN YEARS A CAPTIVE 97.
... provisions , and water , for the voyage . " The boat was to have returned , with some implements of Navigation ; but a squall came on , and continued to blow so hard ; that , we lost sight of 7 TEN YEARS A CAPTIVE 97.
Page 154
... continued for about two years ; -At last a fit came on ; and the Gen- darmes took him , raving to prison ; -The next day , he appeared well again , and received from his banker the sum of thirty pounds in french crowns ; — —he was to ...
... continued for about two years ; -At last a fit came on ; and the Gen- darmes took him , raving to prison ; -The next day , he appeared well again , and received from his banker the sum of thirty pounds in french crowns ; — —he was to ...
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Common terms and phrases
allowed army arrest arrived attempt Austrian Bitche Blayney's British Government British officers British prisoners Captain Brenton captivity citadel clothes Colonel Commandant confined convoy Cossacks Courcelles Demy 8vo depôt détenus dinner dungeons E. V. Lucas Edward Hutton England English Epinal escape escort Fcap feet fellow Fifth Edition fortress Fourth Edition France French French officers friends garrison gendarmes Givet guard hand hundred Illus Illustrated journey letter Lieutenant lodgings Lord Blayney ment Meuse Midshipman Boyes midshipmen months morning Napoleon naval night o'clock Oscar Wilde Paris parole party passed passport Phalsbourg prisoners of war quarters ramparts received regiments road rope round Russian sailors says seamen Second Edition sent Seventh Edition Sixth Edition soldiers soon Spanish taken Third Edition tion told took Tours town trated Valenciennes Verdun Verdun prisoners village walk Whitehurst Wirion Wolfe
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