What we mean to propose is a general congress of nations of which both the meeting and the duration are to depend entirely on the sovereign wills of the several members of the league, and not an indissoluble union like that which exists between the several... Lectures and Speeches - Σελίδα 203των Elihu Burritt - 1869 - 345 σελίδεςΠλήρης προβολή - Σχετικά με αυτό το βιβλίο
| Charles Sumner - 1845 - 108 σελίδες
...537-554, London, 1839,) which are marked by the penetrating sense and humanity of their author. 94 1795. He says ; " What we mean to propose is a general Congress of Nations, of which both the meeting and the duration are to depend entirely on the sovereign wills of the League, and not an indissoluble Union... | |
| Henry Wheaton - 1845 - 820 σελίδες
...has been invoked when too late to correct the irreparable evils inflicted by the abuse of force. " What we mean to propose is a general congress of nations, of which both the meeting and the duration are to depend entirely on the sovereign wills of the several members of the league, and... | |
| John Gregory - 1847 - 120 σελίδες
...General Congreas of Nations, of which, both the meeting nnd the duration are to depend entirely on the sovereign wills of the League, and not an indissoluble...Union, like that which exists between the several State* of North America, founded on a Municipal Constitution. Such a Congress, and such a League, are... | |
| 1850 - 654 σελίδες
...and force, before it was ever mentioned on either side of the Atlantic. He says, " What we ними to propose is, a General Congress of Nations, of which...duration are to depend entirely upon the sovereign will of the League, and not an indissoluble union, like that which exists between the several states... | |
| General peace congress - 1851 - 98 σελίδες
...he had presented to the world with such clearness and force, before it was ever mentioned on cither side of the Atlantic. He says : " What we mean to...a Congress and such a League are the only means of realising the idea of a true public law, according to which the differences between nations would be... | |
| William Tait, Christian Isobel Johnstone - 1855 - 780 σελίδες
...of Nations, of which both the meeting and the duration arc to depend entirely on the sovereign will of the League, and not an indissoluble Union, like that which exists between the several States of North America, founded on a municipal constitution. Such a congress and such a league, are the only... | |
| 1855 - 784 σελίδες
...that of the German philosopher, Kant, who says, in his Essay on Perpetual Peace (published in 1795), " What we mean to propose is, a General Congress of Nations, of which both the meeting und the duration are to depend entirely on the sovereign will of the League, and not an indissoluble... | |
| James Lorimer - 1884 - 650 σελίδες
...general association of States," he says, " might be termed the permanent Congress of Nations. . , . What we mean to propose is a general congress of nations, of which both the meeting and the duration are to depend entirely on the sovereign wills of the several members of the league, and... | |
| James Lorimer - 1884 - 648 σελίδες
...both the meeting and the duration are to depend entirely on the sovereign wills of the several members of the league, and not an indissoluble union like that which exists between the several States of North America, founded on a municipal constitution. Such a congress and such a league are the only... | |
| Immanuel Kant - 1914 - 218 σελίδες
...and more organic was the " universal cosmopolitical institution " contemplated in other passages : " What we mean to propose is a General Congress of Nations...not an indissoluble union, like that which exists among the several states of North America, founded upon a political covenant. Such a Congress and such... | |
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