We would, therefore, humbly beseech Your Majesty not to be induced by a paternal regard for your subjects trading to this remote empire, to leave it to the discretion of any future representative of Your Majesty, as was permitted in the case of the embassy... China - Pàgina 67per Thomas De Quincey - 1857 - 152 pàginesVisualització completa - Sobre aquest llibre
| 1835 - 604 pàgines
...your Majesty not to be induced by a paternal regard for your subjects trading to this remote empire, to leave it to the discretion of any future Representative of your Majesty, as was permitted in the case of the embassy of Lord Amherst, to swerve in the smallest degree from a direct course of calm and dispassionate,... | |
| 1835 - 612 pàgines
...your Majesty not to be induced, by a paternal regard for your subjects trading to this remote empire, to leave it to the discretion of any future representative of your Majesty, as was permitted in the case of the embassy of Lord Amherst, to swerve in the smallest degree from a direct course of calm and dispassionate,... | |
| Thomas De Quincey - 1859 - 340 pàgines
...negotiations in which such pretensions are not decidedly repelled." Finally, I will quote a passage more closely and ominously applicable to any inconsiderate...true rank of your Majesty's empire in the scale of nations.77 And the Memorial concludes with this emphatic sentence, just as wise now as it was then... | |
| Hosea Ballou Morse - 1910 - 822 pàgines
...in the arrogant assumption of superiority " and the necessity for ending it, the government is asked not to " leave it to the discretion of any future...representative of your Majesty, as was permitted in the case of the embassy of Lord Amherst, to swerve in the smallest degree from a direct course of calm and dispassionate,... | |
| Alain Le Pichon - 2006 - 672 pàgines
...Your Majesty not to be induced by a paternal regard for your subjects trading to this remote empire, to leave it to the discretion of any future representative of Your Majesty, as was permitted in the case of the embassy of Lord Amherst, to swerve in the smallest degree from a direct course of calm and dispassionate,... | |
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