
Book contents
- Frontmatter
- PLATES IN VOLUME XXIV. From Original Designs
- PREFACE
- MEMOIR OF THE PUBLIC SERVICES OF THE LATE CAPTAIN JOHN SHORTLAND, OF THE ROYAL NAVY
- MEMOIR OF THE PUBLIC SERVICES OF SIR JAMES ATHOL WOOD, KNT. CAPTAIN IN THE ROYAL NAVY
- MEMOIR OF THE PUBLIC SERVICES OF SIR JAMES LUCAS YEO, KNT. CAPTAIN IN THE ROYAL NAVY
- MEMOIR OF THE PUBLIC SERVICES OF THE LATE SIR RICHARD PEARSON, KNT. CAPTAIN IN THE ROYAL NAVY, AND LIEUTENANT-GOVERNOR OF GREENWICH HOSPITAL
- MEMOIR OF THE PUBLIC SERVICES OF THE LATE CAPTAIN JOHN TURNOR, OF THE ROYAL NAVY
- INDEX
- The Naval Chronicle
MEMOIR OF THE PUBLIC SERVICES OF THE LATE CAPTAIN JOHN SHORTLAND, OF THE ROYAL NAVY
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 10 January 2011
- Frontmatter
- PLATES IN VOLUME XXIV. From Original Designs
- PREFACE
- MEMOIR OF THE PUBLIC SERVICES OF THE LATE CAPTAIN JOHN SHORTLAND, OF THE ROYAL NAVY
- MEMOIR OF THE PUBLIC SERVICES OF SIR JAMES ATHOL WOOD, KNT. CAPTAIN IN THE ROYAL NAVY
- MEMOIR OF THE PUBLIC SERVICES OF SIR JAMES LUCAS YEO, KNT. CAPTAIN IN THE ROYAL NAVY
- MEMOIR OF THE PUBLIC SERVICES OF THE LATE SIR RICHARD PEARSON, KNT. CAPTAIN IN THE ROYAL NAVY, AND LIEUTENANT-GOVERNOR OF GREENWICH HOSPITAL
- MEMOIR OF THE PUBLIC SERVICES OF THE LATE CAPTAIN JOHN TURNOR, OF THE ROYAL NAVY
- INDEX
- The Naval Chronicle
Summary
“From the dust his laurels bloom,
High they shoot, and flourish free;
Glory's temple is the tomb!
Death is immortality.”
Although no part of our naval history has equalled the present in the number, the brilliancy, or the importance of gallant achievements; and rapidly as they pass in succession before our eyes, from the splendid victory of an admiral to the unequal but successful combat of a commander of a packet, a grateful and admiring country records them in her faithful page, prepares a niche in the temple of fame for her hero, and embalms him in our memory for the example and instruction of present and future ages.
Where success crowns the conflict, no deductions are made from its full portion of praise; the public voice enters into no scrutiny; victory sheds a dazzling lustre round the hero, and his brows are decked with blooming laurels, which bid defiance to the noxious breath of envy, or the whisper of detraction. Ample credit is given for the possession of resplendent talents, and personal acquirements; and he is hailed with acclamation in his road to fame and fortune.
But when victory frowns upon him, and ceases to acknowledge him for her child, it is natural to pause before we bestow the meed of praise.
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- Information
- 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. 1 - 176Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2010First published in: 1810