1848 1852 From Old Catalog Democratic Party National Committee
The book Gen Cass And the Quintuple Treaty was written by author 1848 1852 From Old Catalog Democratic Party National Committee Here you can read free online of Gen Cass And the Quintuple Treaty book, rate and share your impressions in comments. If you don't know what to write, just answer the question: Why is Gen Cass And the Quintuple Treaty a good or bad book?
Where can I read Gen Cass And the Quintuple Treaty for free?
In our eReader you can find the full English version of the book. Read Gen Cass And the Quintuple Treaty Online - link to read the book on full screen.
Our eReader also allows you to upload and read Pdf, Txt, ePub and fb2 books. In the Mini eReder on the page below you can quickly view all pages of the book -
Read Book Gen Cass And the Quintuple Treaty
What reading level is Gen Cass And the Quintuple Treaty book?
To quickly assess the difficulty of the text, read a short excerpt:
S of interested or ambitious motives. Each must judge for itself whether such a combined movement is in accord- ance with its policy, or with the nature of its institutions Both may agree to keep squadrons upon the coarit of Af- rica to suppress the slave trade, and upon the coast of China to suppress the opium trade— brancht'? of com- merce destructive of human life and happiness; the lat- ter of which has the. Advantage of being prohibited by tiie government of China, and the disadvantage (if... we cin gredji but a email part of the staiemeatd of that jov- ernment) af being far m««6 injarioas in i^" ";":, t":lwu'^r- .^•cluanve va:. -. -. . --^n power ahonUJjar the former. But these mutual agreements, dictated by the most charitable njotives, would act merely upon the citizens of the respective countries, executing them with- out overawint; others by their imposing form, and with- out leadins? to the establishment of any new principle of maritime iaw. Norhina; can explain to us more clearly the danger of these great combinations, if it does not reveal the object of one or niore of the parties in their establishment, than the principle, so frankly developed by Lord Aberdeen, that this " happy concurrence" creates new duties and ob- ligations, before whose jmt'ce and necessity the law of nations gives way, and to which the interests and inde- pendence of nations are sacrificed.
User Reviews: