| 1828 - 498 sider
...from the Duke of Wellington, who had been sent as our ambassador to the continental congress, — " if there be a determined project to interfere by force...objectionable does it appear to them in ' principle, and so utterly impracticable in execution, that their plenipotentiary is at once and frankly to declare... | |
| 1828 - 526 sider
...from the Duke of Wellington, who had been sent as our ambassador to the continental congress, — " if there be a determined project to interfere by force...objectionable does it appear to them in principle, and so utterly impracticable in execution, that their plenipotentiary is at once and frankly to declare... | |
| George Canning - 1828 - 550 sider
...of September, and the instructions transmitted 'in consequence were in the following terms : — "' If there be a determined project to interfere by force or by menace iu the present struggle in Spain, so convinced are His Majesty's Government of the uselessness and... | |
| 1829 - 476 sider
...Mr. Canning alluded to is as follows: " If there be a determined project to interfere, by force or menace, in the present struggle in Spain, so convinced...government of the uselessness and danger of any such interference—so objectionable does it appear to them in principle, as well as utterly impracticable... | |
| John Styles, Roger Therry - 1830 - 466 sider
...Mr. Canning alluded to is as follows : " If there be a determined project to interfere, by force or menace, in the present struggle in Spain, so convinced...objectionable does it appear to them in principle, as well as ntterly impracticable in execntion — that, when the necessity arises, or I wonld rather say, when... | |
| Augustus Granville Stapleton - 1831 - 512 sider
...correspondence, is where Mr. Canning says, that if there " be a " determined project to interfere, either by force " or by menace, in the present struggle in Spain, " so convinced is His Majesty's Government of " the uselessness and danger of any such inter" ference ; so objectionable... | |
| Augustus Granville Stapleton - 1831 - 510 sider
...correspondence, is where Mr. Canning says, that if there " be a " determined project to interfere, either by force " or by menace, in the present struggle in Spain, " so convinced is His Majesty's Government of " the uselessness and danger of any such inter" ference; so objectionable... | |
| Augustus Granville Stapleton - 1831 - 512 sider
...correspondence, is where Mr. Canning says, that if there " be a " determined project to interfere, either by force " or by menace, in the present struggle in Spain, " so convinced is His Majesty's Government of " the uselessness and danger of any such inter" ference ; so objectionable... | |
| Citizen of the World - 1852 - 202 sider
...force ; and he thus instructed Wellington : " If there be a determined project to interfere by force or menace in the present struggle in Spain, so convinced are his Majesty's Government of the uselassncss and danger of any such interference, so objectionable does it appear to them in principle,... | |
| John Holmes Agnew, Walter Hilliard Bidwell, Henry T. Steele - 1853 - 606 sider
...was then at Paris on his way to Verona, was couched in the following terms : — " If there be any determined project to interfere by force or by menace...Majesty's Government of the uselessness and danger of such interference — so objectionable does it appear to them in principle as well as utterly impracticable... | |
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