Beholder 2 12th floor step 2 stamps1/6/2024 Rejoice at being thus delivered from the difficulty. They were not disappointed in their expectations, that he would Part of the Government, the plan was privately intimated to Yusuf, and However to secure themselves from charges of improper conduct on the To receive Hassuna on board his ship, and to conduct him to some placeįrom which he could with safety proceed to England. Just entered the harbor of Tripoli, and her commander Captain Parker,Īfter examining the circumstances of the case as far as known, agreed It would be scarcely reconcileable either with principle or usage, toĬontinue to protect a man, after his conviction of such crimesĪccording to the forms of law of the country.įortunately at this moment the American sloop of war Fairfield had Guilty of theft or murder if the British Consul should require it, and Would be merely to act as his jailer until the hour of his execution įor the Pasha it was well known would not scruple to declare him To keep Hassuna in his house until the affair was decided, Upon the will of the representative of Great Britain and the more soĪs he had reason to suspect, that it had been dictated by Warrington His exercise of a right allowed to other Consuls, was made to depend Coxe was naturally indignant at the terms of this letter, by which Keep Hassuna in his house until the affair should be decided." Make no farther objection, and that the American Consul "might however Writing to interfere in the case and deposite it with him, he would Coxe could obtain Warrington's permission in Government, and in which the American Consul was in no wise concerned That he could not grant the warrant for Hassuna's safety, as theĪffair was one of great importance between himself and the British No answer having been made to this request, it was The same time, that he only required what was frequently granted to The State, that no attempt would be made to molest Hassuna stating at Which he requested a Teskera or written assurance under the seal of Minister, and he therefore immediately wrote a letter to the Pasha, in Over the Consul of the United States, which were unfounded and Had on various other occasions advanced pretensions to superiority Was burnt by Maltese hired for the purpose by the Americans and he Sherry anĮnglishman who had circulated a story that the frigate Philadelphia In 1828 endeavored, though ineffectually, to protect Dr. TheĮfforts made by Warrington in 1818 to rescue Morat Rais, after theĪttack on the American Consul, have been already noticed he had also Nor could any feelings of peculiar delicacy towards theīritish Consul be expected to influence Mr. Was to go to England where he could easily clear himself from all Traveller, that the British Consul was anxious to procure hisĭestruction from motives of personal enmity, and that his only desire Was innocent of all improper conduct with regard to the unfortunate Nature, and one not likely to be substantiated he protested that he Whole bore a fair character, and was on terms of social intimacy with Suspected of too much devotion to the interests of France, upon the The D'Ghies family hadīeen uniformly the friends of the Americans, and Hassuna although Is entirely disproportioned to offence, no unfavorable inference couldīe fairly drawn from the flight of the accused. Interests or influence of those possessing power, and where punishment Much less on the weight and character of evidence, than on the In a country where the establishment of innocence or guilt depends Present number will contain merely the conclusion of the portion,Ĭommenced in the last, so that the next, may embrace the whole of the On his part, or from want of place in the sheets of the Messenger. This however is in some cases impracticable, either from want of time Number, some distinct portion of the history of the Barbary States The writer of these Sketches endeavors to give entire in each SKETCHES OF THE HISTORY AND PRESENT CONDITION OF TRIPOLI, WITH SOMEĪCCOUNTS OF THE OTHER BARBARY STATES. Y ORK, M ARINER: with a biographical account of Defoe Elletīy the author of The Yemassee, Guy Rivers, &c.Ī MERICA, 1832-33: by Charles Joseph Latrobeī OOK A Manual of Moral, Religious, and Domestic Duties S ONNET T O ********: by Alexander Lacy Beard, M.D. Present Condition of Tripoli, with some accounts of the other 2, JANUARY, 1836 *** THE SOUTHERN LITERARY MESSENGER: DEVOTED TO EVERY DEPARTMENT OF LITERATURE AND THE FINE ARTS.Īu gré de nos desirs bien plus qu'au gré des vents. *** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE SOUTHERN LITERARY MESSENGER, VOL.
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