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