Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: July 22, 1864., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for England or search for England in all documents.

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nent are connected by a system of railroads spreading out in all directions, like the web of a spider. Let England blockade the mouth of the Elbe to-morrow, and neither the Prussian capital, nor any part of the Prussian dominions will receive an ounce less of sugar and coffee, or a yard less of English calicoes. Everything that formerly went direct will be sent to the ports of France, Holland, and Belgium, and thence by rail to all parts of Europe. The fact is, we do not believe that England can now be of any service to Denmark, by means at least of her fleet. The villainy of this whole Danish business — and there has been villainy enough in it — consists in her having tempted Denmark, by holding out promises which she never meant to perform, to advance so far that she cannot recede with either safety or honor. This is not the first time that she has been guilty of similar bad faith. In the war of the Succession she tempted the Catalans to take up arms in favor of the Archdu