| Edmund Burke - 1864 - 776 strani
...Plenipotentiaries of all the Courts concurred unanimously in the intention of their colleague, and did not hesitate to express in the name of their Governments...which any serious misunderstanding may arise should have recourse to friendly mediation before appealing to arms. The solicitude of the Emperor goes further... | |
| 1864 - 998 strani
...Plenipotentiaries of ail the Courts concurred unanimously in the intention of their colleague, and did not hesitate to express in the name of their Governments...which any serious misunderstanding may arise should have recourse to friendly mediation before appealing to arms. The solicitude of the Emperor goes further... | |
| 1873 - 398 strani
...the wish of the signatory governments, that States between which any serious misunderstanding might arise, should before appealing to arms, have recourse...offices of a friendly power. The Plenipotentiaries at Paris took still a further step, which seemed to indicate that they regarded war between two nations... | |
| 1856 - 590 strani
...attention of the different governments, they close the protocol in the following words: — " ' Whereupon the plenipotentiaries do not hesitate to express,...before appealing to arms, have recourse, as far as circumstance.-; might allow, to the good offices of a friendly power. The plenipotentiaries hope that... | |
| John Wade - 1856 - 862 strani
...government. Eventually the proposition was qualified, and agreed to by all the parties in this form : — " The Plenipotentiaries do not hesitate to express,...States, between which any serious misunderstanding mar arise, should, before appealing to arms, have recourse, as far as circumstances might allow, to... | |
| Leone Levi - 1859 - 534 strani
...the Powers parties to the Treaty of Paris, and recorded in the 23rd Protocol of their Conferences, " that States between which any serious misunderstanding...might allow, to the good offices of a friendly Power." Count Cavour, the Sardinian Plenipotentiary, on that occasion gave an apparently cordial adhesion to... | |
| 1859 - 830 strani
...terminated the Crimean war, we hear the voice of all Europe in its favor : " The plenipotentiaries did not hesitate to express, in the name of their governments, . the wish that States, between which any misunderstanding may arise, should have recourse to the good offices of a friendly power." Thus is... | |
| Tyrtaeus - 1862 - 60 strani
...unanimous consent of that august body, and embodied in a resolution expressed in the following terms : — "The Plenipotentiaries do not hesitate to express,...allow, to the good offices of a friendly Power."* * ». Memorial sent by the Committee of the Peace Society to Lord Palmerston. INTRODUCTORY REMARKS.... | |
| John Fraser Macqueen - 1862 - 128 strani
...the armed intervention which took place at that time in Spain. Whereupon the plenipotentiaries did not hesitate to express, in the name of their governments,...might allow, to the good offices of a friendly power. perhaps, to be desired that conflicts should be confined to the bodies acting under the orders and... | |
| John Frederick Smith - 1864 - 576 strani
..." Whereupon," so runs the protocol, " tho plenipotentiaries do not hesitate to express in the namo of their Governments the wish that States between...should, before appealing to arms, have recourse, as well as circumstances might allow, to the good offices of a friendly Power. The plenipotentiaries hope... | |
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