Daily Life During the Indian Mutiny: Personal Experiences of 1857 |
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Page 10
... Nana was attacking Wheeler's entrenchment for the first time . The day was , therefore , June 6th . The Sub - Collector , posted half - way to Cawnpore , had been told to write all in- telligence he could gather , and that evening a ...
... Nana was attacking Wheeler's entrenchment for the first time . The day was , therefore , June 6th . The Sub - Collector , posted half - way to Cawnpore , had been told to write all in- telligence he could gather , and that evening a ...
Page 19
... Nana Sahib . " Mr. Tucker was killed on the 10th of June , and General Have- lock entered Futtehpore on the 12th of July . This is of importance , because , if Mr. Tucker could remain in safety at Futtehpore , we ought not to have left ...
... Nana Sahib . " Mr. Tucker was killed on the 10th of June , and General Have- lock entered Futtehpore on the 12th of July . This is of importance , because , if Mr. Tucker could remain in safety at Futtehpore , we ought not to have left ...
Page 63
... Nana , as far as I remember , expressed regret that he should have violated his conscience ( iman ) by serving the English , an odd state- ment for one of the elect to make to an idolater ; but for acts of boldness , daring , or cruelty ...
... Nana , as far as I remember , expressed regret that he should have violated his conscience ( iman ) by serving the English , an odd state- ment for one of the elect to make to an idolater ; but for acts of boldness , daring , or cruelty ...
Page 66
... Nana himself , could be a staunch well- wisher to the British cause . However , when I had got him , I knew his value too well not to try earnestly to soothe any chagrin he may have felt . His unwieldy form and odd , rolling gait soon ...
... Nana himself , could be a staunch well- wisher to the British cause . However , when I had got him , I knew his value too well not to try earnestly to soothe any chagrin he may have felt . His unwieldy form and odd , rolling gait soon ...
Page 70
... Nana , and his bringing the Sepoys who had actually started for Delhi back again , was a thing which neither Wheeler nor anyone else had ever calculated upon . Therefore , what was appre- hended was the first outbreak , and the general ...
... Nana , and his bringing the Sepoys who had actually started for Delhi back again , was a thing which neither Wheeler nor anyone else had ever calculated upon . Therefore , what was appre- hended was the first outbreak , and the general ...
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Daily Life During The Indian Mutiny: Personal Experiences Of 1857 ... John Walter Sherer Limited preview - 2015 |
Daily Life During the Indian Mutiny: Personal Experiences of 1857 John Walter Sherer No preview available - 2018 |
Common terms and phrases
A. H. LAYARD afterwards Agra Allahabad amongst anxious arrived asked Banda Bews Bithoor body Brahmin brought Bruce bungalow called Calpee camp carriage Cavalry Cawnpore certainly charpoy cholera command course Delhi Deputy-Collector dinner district enemy English entrenchment excitement fellow fire force Futtehpore Government guns hand Harington Havelock heard Hindoo horse idea India Jemadar Joseph Jumna Kalinjur kindly knew ladies looked Lord Clyde Lucknow Mahomedan matchlock Mayne ment military morning moved Mowbray Thomson Mutiny Nagode Nana Nana's native Neill never night Nuwab occupied officers once Oudh Outram party passed perhaps pleasant reached rebels regiment Rewah river road rode seemed sent Sepoys Sir John Inglis Sir John Kaye soldiers soon sowars station Subahdar sword taken tent thing thought tion told took town trees troops Umurnath verandah village Willock Windham word wounded Zemindar
Popular passages
Page 85 - I remember, when in England, in 1860, seeing a large canvas daub in a show at a fair, which was said to represent the Nana, and he really was a terrific embodiment of matted hair, rolling eyes, and cruel teeth. But the reality was extremely unlike the romance. I have heard from several who knew him, and especially Dr. JN Tresidder, who had attended him professionally, that Dhoondoo Punt was an excessively uninteresting person. Between thirty and forty years of age, of middle height, stolid features...
Page 88 - Nana's name became the one to conjure with; but of his individual influence there seems no trace throughout. We know something of what Azimoollah did ; and the hand is not difficult to discover, at times, of Jowala Pershad, Baba Bhut, Tantia Topee, and the rest; but the stolid, discontented figure of the Nana himself remains in the background, rejoicing, doubtless, in the success of the treachery, and gladly consenting, probably, to the cruelty ; but inanimate, incapable of original ideas...
Page 116 - ... of conversation, as one does find oneself when first in the presence of a person of whom one has heard so much. The kindly face, the friendly hand extended, the entire absence of stiffness, or self-consciousness — reminding me greatly, in this noble and natural simplicity, of Mr. Thomason — soon brought re-assurance. He took the trouble to show me a map of Lucknow, and to explain some of the difficulties of reaching the Residency. And never neglecting an opportunity of encouraging what he...
Page 84 - Nana became a scented sybarite, who read Balzac, played Chopin on the piano ; and, lolling on a divan, fanned by exquisite odalisques from Cashmere, had a roasted English child brought in occasionally, on a pike, for him to examine with his pince nez. In England, again, the desire was rather to make out the Nana to have been one of those extraordinary monsters of ferocity and slaughter...
Page 61 - We had, indeed, left General Neill at Allahabad, refusing to believe that Cawnpore was lost. But Havelock knew better. On the 12th of July we started very early, indeed soon after midnight of the llth, and presently we came up with Renaud's detachment. The men were drawn up along the side of the road. I remember being struck, in the moonlight, with the yellow colours of the Sikhs. Then we all marched on together, and at last halted a little short of...
Page 78 - The whole story [he wrote] was so unspeakably horrible that it would be quite wrong in any sort of way to increase the distressing circumstances which really existed. And I may say once for all that the accounts were exaggerated . . . The whole of the pavement was thickly coated with blood.
Page 81 - The well in which are the remains of the poor women and children so brutally murdered by this miscreant, the Nana, will be filled up, and neatly and decently covered over to form their grave : a party of European soldiers will do so this evening, under the superintendence of an officer.
Page 81 - ... .The well . . .will be filled up, and neatly and decently covered over to form their grave... The house in which they were butchered, and which is stained with their blood, will not be washed or cleaned by their countrymen [but by] such of the miscreants as may hereafter be apprehended, who took an active part in the Mutiny, to be selected according to their rank, caste and degree of guilt.
Page 85 - I have heard from several who knew him, and especially Dr. JN Tresidder, who had attended him professionally, that Dhoondoo Punt was an excessively uninteresting person. Between thirty and forty years of age, of middle height, stolid features and increasing stoutness, he might well have passed for the ordinary shop-keeper of the bazaar, had it not been for the Mahratta contour of his turban, of which, however, he did not affect a very pronounced type. He did not speak English, and his habits, if...
Page 73 - ... in a battery, I suddenly saw, far in the distance, a great tongue of fire flung up towards the sky, and immediately afterwards, what looked like a vast black balloon ascended, as if in pursuit of it, showing us, in its dispersion, that it was smoke. Then after a perceptible pause there was a violent explosion, and at the moment I felt a pluck at my knees that made me involuntarily sit tighter. This compression was the passage of the great air-wave, for the Cawnpore Magazine had just been blown...