| Horace S. Knapp - 1877 - 772 str.
...of horror; as last as the men at the guns were wounded they were carried below, and others stepped into their places; the dead remained where they fell until after the action. At this juncture the enemy believed the battle to be won. The Lawrence was reduced to a mere wreck ; her deck was streaming... | |
| Richard Miller Devens - 1879 - 680 str.
...fast as the men at the guns were wounded, they were quietly carried below, and others stepped manfully into their places ; the dead remained where they fell, until after the action. At this juncture, the enemy believed the battle to be won. The Lawrence was reduced to a mere wreck ; her deck was streaming... | |
| Washington Irving - 1881 - 990 str.
...occurred, even for an instant ; as fast as the men were wounded they were carried below, and others slept into their places ; the dead remained where they fell...covered with mangled limbs and the bodies of the slain ; nearly the whole of her crew was either killed or •wounded ; her guns were dismounted, and the... | |
| Washington Irving - 1881 - 996 str.
...occurred, even for an instant; as fast as the men were wounded they were carried below, and others slept into their places; the dead remained where they fell until after the action. At I this juncture the fortune of the battle trembled on a point, and the enemy believed the day their... | |
| Washington Irving - 1886 - 588 str.
...though for a great part of the time he could not get more than three guns to bear upon her antagonists. It was admirable to behold the perfect order and regularity...covered with mangled limbs and the bodies of the slain ; nearly the whole of her crew was either killed •or wounded; her guns were dismounted, and the Commodore... | |
| Richard Miller Devens - 1883 - 756 str.
...fast as the men at the guns were wounded, they were quietly carried below, and others stepped manfully into their places; the dead remained where they fell, until after the action. At this juncture, the enemy believed the battle to be won. The Lawrence was reduced to a mere wreck ; her deck was streaming... | |
| Henry Howe - 1891 - 670 str.
...of horror. As fast as the men at the guns were woundsd they were carried below, and others stepped into their places. The dead remained where they fell until after the action. At this juncture the enemy believed the battle to be won. The Lawrence a Mere Wrtde. — The Lawrence was reduced to a mere... | |
| Washington Irving, William Irving, James Kirke Paulding - 1897 - 438 str.
...occurred, even for an instant ; as fast as the men were wounded they were carried below, and others stepped into their places ; the dead remained where they fell...covered with mangled limbs and the bodies of the slain ; nearly the whole of her crew was either killed or wounded ; her guns were dismounted, and the Commodore... | |
| Washington Irving - 1907 - 614 str.
...though for a gveat part of the time he could not get more than three guns to bear upon her antagonists. It was admirable to behold the perfect order and regularity...point, and the enemy believed the day their own. The Laiorence was reduced to a mere wreck ; her decks were streaming with blood, and covered with mangled... | |
| Clarence Monroe Burton - 1908 - 858 str.
...of horror; as fast as the men at the guns were wounded they were carried below and others stepped to their places ; the dead remained where they fell until after the action. At this juncture the enemy believed the battle to be won. The Lawrence was reduced to a mere wreck; her deck was streaming... | |
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