| Henry Reeve - 1872 - 446 sider
...who 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... | |
| Cassell, ltd - 1875 - 660 sider
...to this matter the duke of Wellington wrote home for instructions, and in reply Canning said : — " If there be a determined project to interfere by force...the uselessness and danger of any such interference — BO objectionable does it appear to them in principle, as well as utterly impracticable in execution... | |
| Harriet Martineau - 1877 - 536 sider
...he had done. The reply to the Duke of Wellington's application for instructions ran as follows : ' If there be a determined project to interfere, by...such interference, so objectionable does it appear to thorn in principle, as well as utterly impracticable in execution, that when the necessity arises,... | |
| Charles Knight - 1880 - 1316 sider
...made at the Congress. The answer of Mr. Canning was ; in terras' that could not be mis* interpreted " If there be a determined project to interfere by force...Majesty's government of the uselessness and danger of any $uch interference, so objectionable does it appear to them in prim ciple, as well as utterly impracticable... | |
| James Taylor - 1882 - 286 sider
...immediately wrote the Duke of Wellington, ' If the allies entertained a determined project of interference by force or by menace in the present struggle in Spain,...objectionable does it appear to them in principle, and so utterly impracticable in execution — that if the necessity should arise, or (I would rather... | |
| William Harris - 1885 - 548 sider
...affairs of Spain would be brought before the congress, he wrote for instructions.* The reply was, " If there be a determined project to interfere, by...Government of the uselessness and danger of any such interference—so objectionable does it appear to them in principle, as well as utterly impracticable... | |
| Justin McCarty - 1888 - 364 sider
...the new era which Canning was introducing into the foreign policy of England. " If," wrote Canning, " there be a determined project to interfere by force...objectionable does it appear to them in principle, as well as impracticable in execution, that when the necessity arises, or, I would rather say, when the opportunity... | |
| Oscar Browning - 1888 - 422 sider
...and so avoid a joint declar-j ation. " But if there should be a determined project of interference by force or by menace in the present struggle in Spain,...objectionable does it appear to them in principle, and so utterly impracticable in execution that, should the necessity arise, or (I would rather say)... | |
| Sir Spencer Walpole - 1890 - 502 sider
...menace in the 1 The instructions will be found in Wellington Supplementary Despatches, voL ip 284. present struggle in Spain, so convinced are his Majesty's...objectionable does it appear to them in principle, and so utterly impracticable in execution — that, if the necessity should arise, or (I would rather... | |
| Sir Spencer Walpole - 1890 - 528 sider
...for intervention in Spain. If the allies entertained, he wrote, "a determined project of interference by force or by menace in the present struggle in Spain,...Government of the uselessness and danger of any such interference—so objectionable does it appear to them in principle, and so utterly impracticable in... | |
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