| Europe - 1732 - 494 pages
...retain the fame in as full and ample a manner, as of right they ought to belong to them : and 'tis always to be underftood that the Freedom of Navigation...when there is nothing committed contrary to the true Senfe and Meaning of thefe Articles. XVI. That the folemn Ratification of this Treaty and Convention... | |
| Douglas Ford - Great Britain - 1907 - 386 pages
...the Spaniards any right to search and make prizes of our ships, but it was " always to be understood that the freedom of navigation ought by no manner...when there is nothing committed contrary to the true sense and meaning of these articles." All those solemn compacts, vital in importance to this country... | |
| Julius Goebel (Jr.) - Falkland Islands - 1927 - 536 pages
...full and ample a manner, as of right they ought to belong to them; and 'tis always to be understood that the freedom of Navigation ought by no manner...when there is nothing committed contrary to the true sense and meaning of these Articles. This provision was an additional safeguard of the provisions of... | |
| English essays - 1738 - 690 pages
...more freely and fecurely, it is, by the i jth Article of the fame Treaty, exprefsly flipulattd, - ' That • the Freedom of Navigation ought, ' by no Manner of Means, to be in•'' terrupted, when there is nothing declare"^ that it is the natural and" undoubted Right, &e.... | |
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