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Browsing named entities in a specific section of The Daily Dispatch: may 17, 1861., [Electronic resource]. Search the whole document.
Found 11 total hits in 3 results.
United States (United States) (search for this): article 13
Malmesbury (search for this): article 13
The American Crisis in the British House of Lords.
In the House of Lords, on the28th of April,the Earl of Malmesbury, adverting to the state of affairs in America, said :
I beg leave to put to my noble friend, the Under-Secretary for Foreign Affairs, a question of which I have given him private notice, in reference to a subject which deeply interests this country, and, I may say, the whole of Europe.
Almost all your lordships have, no doubt, read the accounts which arrived this morning from America, and must have learnt with pain, as well as some astonishment, that a civil war had broken out between the Secessionists in that country and the other States of the Union.
Fortunately, up to the date of those accounts, hardly any blood had been shed, and too much praise cannot, I think, be bestowed upon the commander of the fleet engaged in the transaction to which I refer, for abstaining from entering on a useless contest.
It is impossible, however, that a struggle such as th
April 28th (search for this): article 13
The American Crisis in the British House of Lords.
In the House of Lords, on the28th of April,the Earl of Malmesbury, adverting to the state of affairs in America, said :
I beg leave to put to my noble friend, the Under-Secretary for Foreign Affairs, a question of which I have given him private notice, in reference to a subject which deeply interests this country, and, I may say, the whole of Europe.
Almost all your lordships have, no doubt, read the accounts which arrived this morning from America, and must have learnt with pain, as well as some astonishment, that a civil war had broken out between the Secessionists in that country and the other States of the Union.
Fortunately, up to the date of those accounts, hardly any blood had been shed, and too much praise cannot, I think, be bestowed upon the commander of the fleet engaged in the transaction to which I refer, for abstaining from entering on a useless contest.
It is impossible, however, that a struggle such as th