[Great Britain and the American Civil War by Ephraim Douglass Adams]@TWC D-Link bookGreat Britain and the American Civil War CHAPTER IV 32/48
He had told Russell that the knowledge in Washington of the result of their previous interviews had brought satisfaction, and Russell, for his part, said that Lyons had "learned, through another member of the diplomatic corps, that no further expression of opinion on the subject in question would be necessary[232]." This referred, presumably, to the question of British intention, for the future, in relation to the Proclamation of Neutrality.
Adams wrote: "This led to the most frank and pleasant conversation which I have yet had with his lordship....
I added that I believed the popular feeling in the United States would subside the moment that all the later action on this side was known....
My own reception has been all that I could desire.
I attach value to this, however, only as it indicates the establishment of a policy that will keep us at peace during the continuance of the present convulsion." In reply to Adams' despatch, Seward wrote on July 21, the day after his interview with Lyons, arguing at great length the American view that the British Proclamation of Neutrality in a domestic quarrel was not defensible in international law.
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