No. 120.
General Schenck to Mr. Fish.
London, August 12, 1872. (Received August 23.)
Sir: On Saturday, the 10th instant, the day on which Parliament was prorogued, I did not receive official copies of the Queen’s speech in time for the mail of that day. I forward now, herewith, two copies.
You will observe what Her Majesty is made to say in regard to the declaration of the Arbitrators at Geneva on the subject of the claims for indirect losses; that it is entirely consistent with the views which she announced at the opening of the session. On the contrary, the ground taken in the Queen’s speech in February last was, that the United States had put forward certain claims which Her Majesty’s Government held not to be within the scope of the Treaty. But the Arbitrators studiously avoided giving any opinion on that point, and confined themselves to an expression of opinion, in effect by the Tribunal, that without reference to the question of admissibility or inadmissibility of such claims under the Treaty, they could not, under the principles of public law, be considered in making up an award, because of their remote or consequential character.
I have, &c.,