Papers Relative to the Discussion with France in the Year 1806 |
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Page 6
... March 1806 . IT may be agreeable to you to receive News from this Country . I fend you the Emperor's Specch to the Legifla tive Body . You will therein fee that our Wishes , are are ftill for Peace . I do not afk what ( 6 )
... March 1806 . IT may be agreeable to you to receive News from this Country . I fend you the Emperor's Specch to the Legifla tive Body . You will therein fee that our Wishes , are are ftill for Peace . I do not afk what ( 6 )
Page 11
... Emperor Alexander ; but whilft awaiting the actual Intervention of a Ruffian Plenipotentiary , fome of the principal Points might however be difcuffed , and even provifionally arranged . It might seem , that Ruffia , on account of her ...
... Emperor Alexander ; but whilft awaiting the actual Intervention of a Ruffian Plenipotentiary , fome of the principal Points might however be difcuffed , and even provifionally arranged . It might seem , that Ruffia , on account of her ...
Page 17
... Emperor covets nothing that England pof- feffes . Peace with France is poffible , and may be perpetual , provided there is no Interference in her internal Affairs , and that no Attempt is made to restrain her in the Regulation of her ...
... Emperor covets nothing that England pof- feffes . Peace with France is poffible , and may be perpetual , provided there is no Interference in her internal Affairs , and that no Attempt is made to restrain her in the Regulation of her ...
Page 18
Great Britain. Foreign Office. The Emperor does not imagine that any parti- cular Article of the Treaty of Amiens produced the War . He is convinced , that the true Caufe was , the Refufal to make a Treaty of Commerce , which would ...
Great Britain. Foreign Office. The Emperor does not imagine that any parti- cular Article of the Treaty of Amiens produced the War . He is convinced , that the true Caufe was , the Refufal to make a Treaty of Commerce , which would ...
Page 19
... Emperor's Policy . As to the Intervention of a Foreign Power , the Emperor might accept the Mediation of a Power poffeffing a great Naval Force , because , in that Cafe , the Participation of fuch Power in the Peace would be regulated ...
... Emperor's Policy . As to the Intervention of a Foreign Power , the Emperor might accept the Mediation of a Power poffeffing a great Naval Force , because , in that Cafe , the Participation of fuch Power in the Peace would be regulated ...
Other editions - View all
Papers Relative to the Discussion with France in the Year 1806 (Classic Reprint) Great Britain Foreign Office No preview available - 2017 |
Papers Relative to the Discussion with France in the Year 1806 (Classic Reprint) Great Britain Foreign Office No preview available - 2017 |
Papers Relative to the Discussion with France in the Year 1806 Great Britain Foreign Office No preview available - 2016 |
Common terms and phrases
Alliés Anfwer auffi Auguſt bafe Bafis Baſe Britannick Majefty cellence Champagny Clarke Comte de Lauderdale confent Copy d'Oubril dated Paris Defire Demand deux Difcuffion Difpofition Diſpatch Downing Street Downing-Street Earl of Lauder Earl of Lauderdale Earl of Yarmouth England été être Excellence le Miniftre expreffed fait fame feroit fhall fhould figned Firſt foit fome Foreign Affairs France French Government fuch Guerre high Confideration himſelf Honour Inclofure marked Inftant Inftructions Intereſts King of Italy l'Angleterre l'honneur Lauderdale and Yarmouth le Souffigné Lord Lauderdale Lordship Majefté Britannique Majefty's ment Miniftre des Rélations Miniſter for Foreign Monfieur muſt myſelf neceffary Négociation Negotiation Note obferved Ottoman Empire Paffports Paix Peace peut Plenipotentiaries Poffeffion poffible prefent Prince of Benevento principe propofed Propofition Puiffance Purpoſe qu'elle qu'il reaſonable refpect Rélations Extérieures requeſt Ruffia Secretary Fox Sicily Signé Souffigné Sublime Porte Talleyrand tems theſe tion Traité traiter Treaty Underfigned uti poffidetis Wiſh
Popular passages
Page 136 - In witness whereof We have caused the Great Seal of Our United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland to be affixed to these Presents which We have signed with Our Royal Hand. Given at Our Court at Balmoral the twenty-fourth day of October in the year of Our Lord one thousand eight hundred and eighty-seven, and in the fifty-first year of Our Reign.
Page 51 - Stuart, and of the letter which your excellency did me the honour to write to me on the...
Page 60 - Talleyrand desired mC to call upon him; having done so, he told me that the French government had been looking out for some means by which a secret and confidential communication might be made, explanatory of the sentiments and views of France, as well as the outlines of the terms on which peace might be restored between the two countries.
Page 136 - ... above mentioned, in as full and ample form and manner and with the like validity and effect, as we ourself, if we were present, could do and perform the...
Page 135 - ... nor on the contrary) for us and in our name, to meet, confer, treat and conclude with the...
Page 336 - ... cannot be opened to them without committing an act of hostility against France, and without giving his Majesty, Napoleon the Great, a right of passage over the territories of the Ottoman empire, in order to combat with the Russian army on the banks of the Dniester. — Any renewal or continuation of alliance with the enemies of France, such as England and Russia, would be not only a manifest violation of the neutrality, but an accession on the part of the...
Page 329 - Sept. 24th, 1802. The term of the continuance of the hospodars in their governments shall from henceforth be fixed at seven complete and entire years, to date from the day of their nomination, and if they are not guilty of any open offence, they shall not be displaced before that term is expired ; if they do commit an offence...
Page 65 - qu' en politiqueen ne peut parler la même langues! on n'y est également autorisé;" and as frequently said that they considered that Hanover for the honour of the crown, Malta for the honour of the navy, and the Cape of Good Hope for the honour of British commerce, to be sufficient inducements to induce his majesty's ministers to make peace.
Page 18 - You are the rulers of the ocean, your naval forces are equal to those of all the sovereigns of the world united. We area great continental power; but there are many who equal our power by land, and your maritime preponderance will always place our commerce at the mercy of your squadrons, immediately after your declaring war.
Page 262 - Britannic majesty had of the in. tentions of that court,) would be willing to negotiate with the French government ; to reduce them into the form of a treaty in the event of their being agreed to on both sides ; and to insert an article in the provisional treaty between Great Britain, and France, by which his Britannic majesty should engage to employ his mediation for the purpose of obtaining the accession of his majesty the emperor of all the Russias to the said treaty.