Remarks on the Proposals Made to Great Britain for Opening Negotiations for Peace in the Year 1807 |
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Page 14
... Budberg , in which the Bri- tish envoy declares , that " whatever " doubts he might have entertained on " the subject of negotiating for a general peace , they had been completely done 66 66 away by a letter from General Bud- berg to ...
... Budberg , in which the Bri- tish envoy declares , that " whatever " doubts he might have entertained on " the subject of negotiating for a general peace , they had been completely done 66 66 away by a letter from General Bud- berg to ...
Page 18
... the Russian Ambassador at London to Petersburgh . In answer to these demands , General Budberg , the Russian Minister , " acknowledged the " existence of secret articles in the treaty " of 18 tween Lord Granville Leveson Gower, ...
... the Russian Ambassador at London to Petersburgh . In answer to these demands , General Budberg , the Russian Minister , " acknowledged the " existence of secret articles in the treaty " of 18 tween Lord Granville Leveson Gower, ...
Page 21
... Budberg's conversation . Instead of " that coldness and reserve which cha- " racterized the replies of the Russian " Minister to the questions which the “ British Ambassador had thought it his 66 duty to put to him in previous con ...
... Budberg's conversation . Instead of " that coldness and reserve which cha- " racterized the replies of the Russian " Minister to the questions which the “ British Ambassador had thought it his 66 duty to put to him in previous con ...
Page 27
... Bud- berg to believe that his Majesty is " anxious rather to find the means of 6 % 66 66 66 66 preventing , or remedying the evil , " than to discover grounds of complaint against Russia . " The great object , however , to which the ...
... Bud- berg to believe that his Majesty is " anxious rather to find the means of 6 % 66 66 66 66 preventing , or remedying the evil , " than to discover grounds of complaint against Russia . " The great object , however , to which the ...
Page 30
... Bud- berg was succeeded , as Minister for foreign affairs , by Count Soltykoff , who was soon afterwards removed to make way for Count Romanzow , pro- duced no consequences favourable to the hopes of the British Ministry . Some attempts ...
... Bud- berg was succeeded , as Minister for foreign affairs , by Count Soltykoff , who was soon afterwards removed to make way for Count Romanzow , pro- duced no consequences favourable to the hopes of the British Ministry . Some attempts ...
Other editions - View all
Remarks on the Proposals Made to Great Britain for Opening Negotiations for ... William Roscoe No preview available - 2017 |
Remarks on the Proposals Made to Great Britain for Opening Negotiations for ... William Roscoe No preview available - 2016 |
Common terms and phrases
acceptance allies Alopeus answer appears April asserted assurances Austrian ambassador avowed battle of Friedland Bonaparte Britain Britannic Majesty British Ambassador British Government British Ministry Budberg Cabinet of St circumstances communication conduct conference consequence considered Copenhagen Count de Starhemberg Count Romanzow Court of London dated St Declaration Denmark desire Dispatch Emperor of Austria Emperor of Russia endeavours enemy engaged England enter Europe expressed feel Foreign Affairs French Government Granville Leveson Gower high consideration hostility Imperial Majesty inclose interests jesty King Lord G. L. Gower Lord Granville Leveson Majesty the Emperor Majesty's Majesty's Government measures ment nations negotiate for peace neral object obtain offer of mediation official note Peace of Tilsit peror Petersburgh Plenipotentiaries powers present Prince de Starhemberg principles Projęt proposed racter received renew Russian Government Russian Minister secret articles Secretary sentiments sincere sion tained taken place tion tranquillity Treaty of Tilsit Undersigned Vienna views
Popular passages
Page 4 - II. could not behold, without the deepest concern, the rupture which took place last autumn, between his majesty the emperor of the French, king of Italy, and his majesty the king of Prussia ; and he was shortly afterwards still more painfully affected, by the extension of hostilities over a considerable part of Europe.
Page 11 - I have received the letter which your excellency did me the honour to write to me on the 12th of December, 1827, and laid it before the emperor.
Page 55 - His Majesty has thus replied to all the different accusations by which the Russian Government labours to justify the rupture of a connection which has subsisted for ages, with reciprocal advantage to Great Britain and Russia ; and attempts to disguise the operation of that external influence by which Russia is driven into unjust hostilities for interests not her own.
Page 52 - ... communication of the articles of the peace of Tilsit. The first of these conditions was precisely the same which the emperor of Russia had himself annexed not four months before to his own acceptance of the proffered mediation of the emperor of Austria. The second was one which his majesty would have had a right to require, even as the ally of his imperial majesty ; but which it would have been highly improvident...
Page 46 - ... to obtain for him honourable conditions. But the British ministry, apparently faithful to that plan which was to loosen and break the bonds which had connected Russia and England, rejected the mediation. The peace between Russia and France was to prepare a general peace. Then it was that England suddenly quitted that apparent lethargy to which she had abandoned herself : but it was to cast upon the north of Europe new firebrands, which were to enkindle and nourish the flames of war, which she...
Page 48 - He proclaims anew the principles «f the armed neutrality, that monument of the wisdom 'of the empress Catherine, 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.
Page 52 - Majesty was thus led into an apparent compliance with a limitation so offensive to the dignity of an independent Sovereign. But the answer so returned by His Majesty was not a refusal. It was a conditional acceptance. The conditions required by His Majesty were, a statement of the basis upon which the enemy was disposed to treat ; and a communication of the articles of the peace of Tilsit.
Page 55 - Majesty as the guarantee of the peace to be concluded between Great Britain and Denmark. In making that appeal, with the utmost confidence and sincerity, His Majesty neither intended, nor can he imagine that he offered, any insult to the Emperor of Russia. Nor can His Majesty conceive that, in proposing to the Prince Royal terms of peace, such as the most successful war on the part of Denmark could hardly have...
Page 5 - He will not take upon himself to suggest the particular mode of negociation, and still less to anticipate the intentions of other Powers, or to decide upon those measures which it may be thought necessary previously to settle, in order to determine the principles of the preliminary overtures between the Belligerent Powers. Nevertheless, in the hope that this friendly offer of his interposition will be appreciated in...
Page 6 - Ireland, has received, with a just sense of the consideration which is due to every communication from His Imperial Majesty the Emperor , of Austria, King of Hungary and Bohemia, and of .the motives by which, on this occasion, His Imperial Majesty has been actuated, the offer of his Imperial Majesty to become the mediator of a general peace. The King, who has never ceased to consider a secure and durable peace as the only object of the war in which His Majesty is engaged, and...