Refine Search

THE THEATRE—MR AND MRS CHARLES KEAN

... manifest ere a few of the earlier scenes have passed, that the leading idea was suggestedi by the character of the generous Whig Morton, in the Old Mortalitv of Sir Walter Scott. Strathmore is the I Morton of the tragedy, and Catherine torn, the Edith ...

LITERATURE

... Pasha, who is going to make so moch noise. H~e wias born a Georgian (not a Jla- uchbie) Christian, and wvas, consequently, a Whig from his Icradle. He was kidnapped proml his parents at six years old, and wans sent to Constantinlople to be a slave, and ...

GOVERNMENT PATRONAGE OF LITERARY MEN

... Bishop of Birmingham. Considering thle liberality in matters of' religious toleration which hias always distinguished the 'Whig party, it cannot be thought surriingiferen this moderate usossnre of repressioim sol aebeen at first opposed within the Cabinet ...

THE GREAT EXHIBITION

... d as Sir Edward' Lyttoi-from on'ewho isa'oonstitutional Whig mixing in the society of leading Whbigs-may reasonably be expected to knoiw something of the real opinions of the constitutional Whig party,'will, we are sure, he read with great satisfac- tin ...

THE GREAT EXHIBITION

... institntion. '-'' ' - : oros .-'flie electors of Boston have replaced their late 5 member, the Honourable Captain Pelhnm, ,a W.hig and a., Free Trader, by'Mr Frebhfield,ilate solicitor to the Bank'of England, a Conseevativei'and' Proteitioist. ':The Man- ...

THE GREAT EXHIBITION

... ir noble and -distiangished parentt.- ' -The.Earl cf-uitt'enham- ;it- is scarcely.-necessary to--add throughout life'wa4 a Whig, and-ai soandia ipartial - judge. ,- ; C i - ' .,SNODO ioP -CUecue- iOr SCOTLAeD, rare- EcNDa.- s This synodncording to the ...

THE GREAT EXHIBITION

... sounding in the river, on the site of the railway bridge intended to cross the Boyne below the town of Drogheda. The Nortiern Whig congratulates its readers on the success that has attended the efforts to restore the iron manufacture in Ireland. In Belfast ...

LITERATURE

... the st bet should' of be reoewed in tenext assembly, he vould' notesuppo t it. it was to- - ioweil, hut by tilat timne the Whigs veto displaced; amtd that very per- s-ono opposed it, atid amolig Otellor things butt the atudacity to say that of he coslil ...

AL, — bn «gor bas been running its successful course during the week, and we have no reason to alter

... into as- | senting to a!l the propositions laid down by the writer, whoever he may be. I am quite willing to allow that the Whig-Russell Ministry had become effete and and that the sooner they were got rid of, and the longer was their period of hybernation ...

LITERATURE

... set ,Sotadard.'Ittis afact worthy ofntcAe h-is oiia rtrten of die Tory party, and, the mest44-y'ertiledjos~urtist' Of the 'Whig te-r sonnexion-the editors of, the ''ieondairt and the Globtl,-Dsate Gfif- ford and Father Prour,' should both be Irishmen ...

DINNER TO MR. MONCREIFF, M.P., AT MUSSELBURGH

... great party—the Liberal party, better known in English bis- torv as the great Whig party which bad all along been the against oppression. Mr Bridges then traced the of the Whigs in the cause of liberty, from the acces- sion of the noble family which now ...

BY OUR USUAL EXPRESS

... and at his At the resignation of Lord Melbourne in 1839, the Queen ion commissioned Sir R. Peel to form a Ministry; but the Whigs returned to office, Her refusing to dismiss the ladies of her household. binet, which remained in In 1841 Sir R. Peel succeeded ...