Letters and Correspondance, Public and Private, of the Right Honourable Henry St. John, Lord Viscount Bolingbroke: During the Time He was Secretary of State to Queen Anne, 第 3 卷G. G. & J. Robinson, 1798 |
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第68页 - It is near three o'clock in the morning, I have been hard at work all day, and am not yet enough recovered to bear much fatigue; excuse therefore the confusedness of this scroll, which is only from Harry to Matt, and not from the secretary to the minister.
第64页 - Dear Mat, hide the nakedness of thy country, and give the best turn thy fertile brain will furnish thee with to the blunders of thy countrymen, who are not much better politicians than the French are poets.
第266页 - ... it), may give us occasion to encroach at any time upon their dominions in Canada, I have answered, that since, according to the carte which came from our Plenipotentiaries, marked with the extent of what was thought our dominion, and returned by the French with what they judged the extent of theirs, there was no very great difference, and that the parties who determine that difference, must be guided by the same carte, I thought the article would admit no dispute. In case it be either determined...
第304页 - To speak seriously, unless the queen can talk of her interest as determined with France, and unless your court will keep our allies in the wrong, as they are sufficiently at this time, I foresee inextricable difficulties.
第65页 - I have again stated as clearly as I am able. The queen can never do anything, which shall look like a direct restraint on her allies from demanding what they judge necessary ; but as long as they act the part which they now do, she can very justly be passive and neuter as to their interests : and if her peace be made before theirs, which she will not delay for them, she can with the same justice leave them to make their own bargain.
第266页 - ... parties who determine that difference, must be guided by the same carte, I thought the article would admit no dispute. In case it be either determined immediately by the Plenipotentiaries or referred to commissioners, I take leave to add to your Lordship that these limitations are no otherwise advantageous or prejudicial to Great Britain than as we are better or worse with the native Indians and that the whole is a matter rather of industry than dominion.
第64页 - of thy country, and give the beft turn thy fertile " brain will furnifh thee with to the blunders of thy *' countrymen, who are not much better politicians ** than the French are poets.
第299页 - Jan. 8/19, 1712/3. posal of Newfoundland, which is the same you and I (NB this is Matt and Harry) laid down; and if we can take 1664 for our plan, in order to reduce the traffic to that era, the peace is made; otherwise I see no shore; not but that I am ready to swim as long as you please in alto mart or super...
第266页 - Yet since, in either case, the right of the inhabitant as to transferring his goods and effects, or disposing of his person and family is always provided for in treaty, I leave it to your Lordship's better judgment if a fixed time in either case (suppose eighteen months or two years), does not put the subject, who is to have the benefit which restitution or cession grants him, upon a more equal foot...