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Browsing named entities in a specific section of The Daily Dispatch: June 10, 1863., [Electronic resource]. Search the whole document.
Found 5 total hits in 5 results.
Jezioranski (search for this): article 18
The Polish revolution.
A correspondent of the London Daily News, who writes from Cracow under date of May 4, gives an interesting account of a visit to the camp of the Polish insurgents on the Gallician frontier, commanded by Gen. Jezioranski.
He describes the appearance of the camp as follows:
From afar we could descry the camp fires scattered in all directions among the trees, and as we drew near and began to distinguish the picturesque groups of insurgents sitting round cash, with their horses picketed beside them, it seemed so like a brigand spectacle scene out of an opera that it was hard to believe there was a terrible earnestness and reality about it. Approaching one of these groups we found some dozen motley dressed, bandit-looking fellows seated round a caldron, in which lead was molting for the stern work before them.
Winnicki, the chief of the staff, a noble looking fellow, wearing a Polish tunic, with cap and feathers, was standing in the midst, and in the act
Joseph J. English (search for this): article 18
Russian (search for this): article 18
1831 AD (search for this): article 18
April, 5 AD (search for this): article 18
The Polish revolution.
A correspondent of the London Daily News, who writes from Cracow under date of May 4, gives an interesting account of a visit to the camp of the Polish insurgents on the Gallician frontier, commanded by Gen. Jezioranski.
He describes the appearance of the camp as follows:
From afar we could descry the camp fires scattered in all directions among the trees, and as we drew near and began to distinguish the picturesque groups of insurgents sitting round cash, with their horses picketed beside them, it seemed so like a brigand spectacle scene out of an opera that it was hard to believe there was a terrible earnestness and reality about it. Approaching one of these groups we found some dozen motley dressed, bandit-looking fellows seated round a caldron, in which lead was molting for the stern work before them.
Winnicki, the chief of the staff, a noble looking fellow, wearing a Polish tunic, with cap and feathers, was standing in the midst, and in the act