impossible not to see that

that the

dangers likely to

of war

or great

Causes, and

the latter

385

arise from

a clumsy intervention

on the part of

Foreign ships

impossibility of masking the

whole sea-going population

understand

the true object

of such Foreign interference

me ...

as

would

exercise of

be involved in the

a

right of Search

eligure, or to believe

and

that this was

more

other than

The want of

Communication by any language

known

to both parties

the

difficulty of preventing

mistaken

and oppressive

interference in

instances

a

thousand

and of daily

occurrence from

misapprehension

the protection of

the

peaceable

and honest trader or fisher

against the piratical Vessels

that prey upon them, are

alone, apart from all other

Causes

all

so

many arguments

against

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