Considerations on the Causes Objects and Consequences of the Present War,: And on the Expediency, Or the Danger of Peace with FranceJ. M'Creery, 1808 - 135 strán (strany) |
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Considerations on the Causes Objects and Consequences of the Present War ... William Roscoe Úplné zobrazenie - 1808 |
Considerations on the Causes Objects and Consequences of the Present War ... William Roscoe Úplné zobrazenie - 1808 |
Considerations on the Causes Objects and Consequences of the Present War ... William Roscoe Úplné zobrazenie - 1808 |
Časté výrazy a frázy
abuse affairs alliance allies appears armies asserted attack upon Copenhagen attack upon France Austrian avowed battle of Austerlitz Bonaparte Britain British Ministry cause circumstances commerce compelled conduct consequences contend contest continental continued cumstance danger Danish declaration defend Denmark disgrace dominions dread effect effectually removed Elegantly printed enemy England Engravings Europe fleets foreign French Government French Minister French Ruler friends Hanover honour hopes hostilities importance interests Island kingdom late laws Lord Hawkesbury Lord Mulgrave Lord Whitworth Lord Yarmouth Majesty Majesty's Majesty's Government Malta maritime ment military nation naval navy negotiation numbers observed occasion ourselves overturn peace PERPETUAL WAR Picturesque Beauty Pitt possession present principles printed in 4to proposed proposition purpose restoration Royal Highness Ruler of France Russia sacrifices sion sovereign sufficient superiority tain Talleyrand temned terminated tion treaty of Amiens treaty of Tilsit University of Dublin uti possidetis Volume whilst
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Strana 20 - ... and England with a fleet that made her mistress of the seas, and which he did not think he should be able to equal in less than ten years. Two such countries, by a proper understanding, might govern the world, but by their strifes might overturn it.
Strana 18 - ... forces in Egypt, and against the British army in that quarter, insinuations and charges wholly destitute of foundation, and such as would warrant His Majesty in demanding that satisfaction, which, on occasions of this nature, independent Powers in a state of amity have a right to expect from each other. It discloses, moreover, views in the highest degree injurious to the interests of His Majesty's dominions...
Strana 90 - ... and engages never to recede from that system. He demands of England, complete satisfaction to all ,his subjects, for their just reclamations of vessels and merchandize, detained against the express tenor of treaties concluded in his own reign. ( The emperor engages, there shall be no re-establishment of concord, between Russia and England, till satisfaction shall have been given to Denmark.
Strana 84 - ... not more fatal to his interests than to those of the powers who were destined to be the instruments of its execution. It was time that the effects of that dread which France has inspired into the. nations of the world, should be counteracted by an exertion of the power of Great Britain, called for by the exigency of the crisis, and proportioned to the magnitude of the danger.
Strana 35 - As he spoke the hopes of freedom revived ; corruption shrunk from his glance, and the nation hailed him as her deliverer ; but no sooner was the prize within his grasp than he seized it with an eagerness, and retained it with a tenacity, which all the efforts of his opponents could neither impede nor relax. Having thus obtained the supreme power, the talents which had acquired it were employed with equal success to preserve it. The correction of abuses, the removal of peculation and corruption, the...
Strana 43 - Even the political opponents of Mr. Fox ought to have felt rightly on such a subject. They ought to have known, that it was no effort to his great and generous mind to reject the proposals of an avowed assassin. It is not on this account that he is intitled to our applause ; but it is because he had the virtue and the courage to bring Forwards into public life, and to exemplify in the most striking manner, one of the most important maxims of morality — that it is never expedient to do evil in the...
Strana 73 - That such doctrines have of late been asserted in this country, in the most open and profligate manner, is a dreadful symptom of that moral and intellectual depravity which precedes the fall of nations. To read the daily effusions of some of our popular writers, one would suppose that the human race was not the offspring of one common parent.