
Book contents
- Frontmatter
- PLATES IN VOLUME XXXVIII: From Original Designs
- PREFACE TO THE THIRTY-EIGHTH VOLUME
- BIOGRAPHICAL MEMOIR OF CAPTAIN WILLIAM LAYMAN, OF THE ROYAL NAVY
- BIOGRAPHICAL MEMOIR OF CAPTAIN WILLIAM LAYMAN, OF THE ROYAL NAVY
- BIOGRAPHICAL MEMOIR OF ROBERT HENDERSON, ESQ. CAPTAIN IN THE ROYAL NAVY
- BIOGRAPHICAL MEMOIR OF THE LATE CHARLES BOYLES, ESQ. VICE-ADMIRAL OF THE BLUE
- BIOGRAPHICAL MEMOIR OF THE LATE WILLIAM FOTHERGILL, ESQ. CAPTAIN IN THE ROYAL NAVY
- BIOGRAPHICAL MEMOIR OF KENNETH MACKENZIE, ESQ. CAPTAIN IN THE ROYAL NAVY
- INDEX
BIOGRAPHICAL MEMOIR OF THE LATE WILLIAM FOTHERGILL, ESQ. CAPTAIN IN THE ROYAL NAVY
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 10 January 2011
- Frontmatter
- PLATES IN VOLUME XXXVIII: From Original Designs
- PREFACE TO THE THIRTY-EIGHTH VOLUME
- BIOGRAPHICAL MEMOIR OF CAPTAIN WILLIAM LAYMAN, OF THE ROYAL NAVY
- BIOGRAPHICAL MEMOIR OF CAPTAIN WILLIAM LAYMAN, OF THE ROYAL NAVY
- BIOGRAPHICAL MEMOIR OF ROBERT HENDERSON, ESQ. CAPTAIN IN THE ROYAL NAVY
- BIOGRAPHICAL MEMOIR OF THE LATE CHARLES BOYLES, ESQ. VICE-ADMIRAL OF THE BLUE
- BIOGRAPHICAL MEMOIR OF THE LATE WILLIAM FOTHERGILL, ESQ. CAPTAIN IN THE ROYAL NAVY
- BIOGRAPHICAL MEMOIR OF KENNETH MACKENZIE, ESQ. CAPTAIN IN THE ROYAL NAVY
- INDEX
Summary
Alike to him each climate and each blast—
The first in danger, in retreat the last.
Falconer.THE services of an active life, when private and particular, are entitled to a lasting and grateful recollection; it is the only tribute of respect which we can pay to the manes of our benefactors; and in every sensible mind the gratification arising from this due acknowledgment, will insure their frequent operation on the memory. But when such services have combined for the protection and prosperity of a whole nation, a more general acknowledgment is due, and a public record of them becomes the appropriate medium of its attainment.
The gentleman in respect to whose memory we mean the above observations to apply, has lately terminated an active life in the service of his country, which in a private course of service might have lasted to a more advanced period, with the powers of a vigorous enjoyment. But each in his station must fulfil his destiny—and that well accomplished, the difference of years in the narrow span of human life must be immaterial, when estimated by a calm and rational reflection. To drink of life's cup to its very dregs, is to taste its bitterest portion.—How honorably and usefully he has run his course, it is now our business to show.
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- The Naval ChronicleContaining a General and Biographical History of the Royal Navy of the United Kingdom with a Variety of Original Papers on Nautical Subjects, pp. 349 - 436Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2010First published in: 1817