The North American Review, Том 95Jared Sparks, Edward Everett, James Russell Lowell, Henry Cabot Lodge O. Everett, 1862 Vols. 227-230, no. 2 include: Stuff and nonsense, v. 5-6, no. 8, Jan. 1929-Aug. 1930. |
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... vessel in for adjudication ; and the surrender is made on account of this omission , or because the United States ... vessels , a claim which it was attempted to sustain by the plea of necessity , and which , how- ever shaken , has never ...
... vessel in for adjudication ; and the surrender is made on account of this omission , or because the United States ... vessels , a claim which it was attempted to sustain by the plea of necessity , and which , how- ever shaken , has never ...
Страница 7
... vessel according to his standard in regard to neutral rights . It is perhaps not necessary to our present purpose , but we take occasion to say , that , upon any open question , not settled ― by agreement or consent between the two ...
... vessel according to his standard in regard to neutral rights . It is perhaps not necessary to our present purpose , but we take occasion to say , that , upon any open question , not settled ― by agreement or consent between the two ...
Страница 8
... vessels of the latter navigating the open sea , which is the highway of all nations . It has been asserted by some , that a vessel on the ocean is to be regarded as a part of the territory of the government to which she belongs ; but ...
... vessels of the latter navigating the open sea , which is the highway of all nations . It has been asserted by some , that a vessel on the ocean is to be regarded as a part of the territory of the government to which she belongs ; but ...
Страница 9
... vessels at sea depends on the principle that every vessel is part of the state to which it belongs ; and he adds : " This principle I am prepared to maintain , and must do so , for it will become of much importance in a future stage of ...
... vessels at sea depends on the principle that every vessel is part of the state to which it belongs ; and he adds : " This principle I am prepared to maintain , and must do so , for it will become of much importance in a future stage of ...
Страница 10
... vessel can , with any just reason , be regarded as part of the territory . The proposition is , at best , but a mere fiction , for the purpose of asserting a jurisdiction over the ship while on the high seas , and a very unnecessary ...
... vessel can , with any just reason , be regarded as part of the territory . The proposition is , at best , but a mere fiction , for the purpose of asserting a jurisdiction over the ship while on the high seas , and a very unnecessary ...
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American American Tract Society aorist beauty belligerent better Boston Britain Captain Wilkes capture cause character Christian Church civil Constitution contraband Corn Laws cotton court despatches Divine doctrine duties emancipation England English equally evil fact faith favor feeling foreign France Frankl friends Gasparin give hemp honor hostile human important influence interest Irving Jelf Jews judicial remedy labor laudanum less liberty London Lord Madame Swetchine manufactures ment mind moral Mormon Morrill tariff narcotic nation nature neutral opinion opium persons political present principles produced question reason rebellion regard relations religion religious render respect Saints secession seems slavery slaves Slidell society South South Carolina Southern spirit tariff tariff of 1816 territory things thought tion tobacco Tocqueville Trent true truth United vessel volume vote whole words writes York
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