| Albert Bushnell Hart - 1932 - 220 pages
...diplomats and experts in international law. Upon such councils was based his message of December 3, 1793. "As soon as the war in Europe had embraced those...suspicions too often entertained by belligerent nations. It seems, therefore, to be my duty to admonish our citizens of the consequences of a contraband trade... | |
| United States. Department of State - United States - 1869 - 882 pages
...preservation of neutrality, and the necessity for legislation on the subject in the following tenus: "As soon as the war in Europe had embraced those powers •with Pair's™™? S'**te wnom tne United States have the most extensive relations, there, -was 31. ' '... | |
| Alastair Hamilton, Alexander Hamilton, Harold C. Syrett - Biography & Autobiography - 1969 - 752 pages
...considerable part of Europe has within the present year extended itself much further; implicating all those powers with whom the United States have the most extensive relations. When it was seen here, that almost all the maritime Nations either were, or were likely soon to become... | |
| Frank P. King - Political Science - 1997 - 260 pages
...again, in February 1793 and not really ending until 1814. Washington described his own thinking in early December 1793: "As soon as the war in Europe had embraced...the suspicions too often entertained by belligerent nations."29 Later, in a letter to Lafayette in late 1798, he elevated this to a principle: "My politics... | |
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