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I've always enjoyed the aplomb of supposedly striaght-faced having no more reaction to the cannon shot than looking down and saying "My god sir, I've lost my leg" to which Wellington replied "My god sir, so you have"
There's a similar story from someone's journal at the time of an officer having their arm amputated without any form of pain relief after the battle of waterloo, and the officers friend right outside the tent had no idea there was even an amputation going on (lack of usual screaming) until he heard his friend say "Bring that arm back, don't just throw it away over there, it has a ring from my wife upon the finger I would like"
Being very stressful and otherwise busy environments, I imagine that being on a battlefield, and especially having long experience on a battlefield, causes people to tend to diminish in their own minds events - such as serious yet non-fatal injury - that they would focus more on if they were afforded more tranquility.
I'm reading Redcoat by Richard Holmes, and it mentions an Irish soldier named John Dunn, who walked seven miles after a battle in the Peninsular War to see a captain in his company, George Napier, an Englishman who in contrast to many of his contemporaries had nothing but respect for the Irish soldier. Napier, recovering from a wound, noted that Private Dunn himself had a bandaged arm. Dunn (who had also lost a brother in the same battle), replied:
Because of this visit by Dunn which made a lasting impact on him, Napier had told his sons;
I want to say, the real TIL is that George Canning, a Tory statesman who eventually became Prime Minister, wrote a poem in commemoration(?) of the leg, and it is hilarious. The full thing is on the page, but here's one verse:
Might not top what Lord Uxbridge might have said himself while he was getting amputated; he treated the fact that his active military service was probably over by saying "I've had a pretty long run."
Except Lord Uxbridge wasn’t talking about his career: "I have had a pretty long run. I have been a beau these forty-seven years, and it would not be fair to cut the young men out any longer."
Evidently Lord Uxbridge fucked.
I suppose the ladies were lucky the cannon hit his right leg and not his middle one.
The whole family got in on the act.
"Uxbridge's close family lost several limbs in the service of the United Kingdom during the Napoleonic Wars: his brother, Major-General Sir Edward Paget, lost his right arm in the crossing of the Douro during the Second Battle of Porto in 1809, and his daughter lost a hand tending her husband on a battlefield in Spain."
I had been aware that female companions (be they wives, sweethearts, or lets say more 'transactional' forms of relationships) of soldiers had been an immutable part of military life in this era and indeed almost every era before it since the dawn of warfare, but finding out the daughter of an aristocrat in Regency Britain had a battlefield amputation still honestly shocked me. It's the sort of thing where unless you specifically heard about cases like this, if you saw it portrayed in a film you would think "There's no way this was real.". Jane Austen could've had a character like her in one of her novels, and it'd be entirely authentic.
Jeez. Who does this family think they are? The Skywalkers?
A monument to leg day
“Paint my dick big”
Skinny jeans got nothing on those Regency right pants.
I believe (probably wrong) that he's dressed as a Hussar, who had a bit of a reputation for being the Mr. Steal Your Girls of the Napoleonic Era. Mustaches were fashionable in Britain and France in the Victorian Era because of them; the original and best Hussars were from Eastern Europe, nations like Poland and Hungary, where men tended to grow mustaches if they could, and so when Western European armies added them to their cavalry forces they wanted to adopt their looks, and the image of the dashing and moustachioed cavalry officer bled into civilian life.
He had 18 kids! Eloped with wife number two
Who was Wellington's sister-in-law. It made things awkward during the Hundred Days (Waterloo) Campaign when Uxbridge was defacto second-in-Command.
He had it better than this guy
I guess since they kept the leg, he WAS amputated from it, instead of it being amputated from him.