Fashion and Varieties

... the county. and cftv of Dublin, and Custos Rotulorum of the county of Wi;klow. In politics, his Lordship was one of the old Whigs, the active and in- timate friend and associate of Burke, Fox, Ponsonby, Grattan, Grey, &c., and, at the time of the passing ...

Public Amusements

... carried ti ?? Besrd is now composed of' eight vi Chartisti, two Conservatives, and two gentlemen iv who usually vote with the Whigs, u An American paper states that General Tom sl Thumb was lately arrested in Savannah, and fined if ten dollars, for driving ...

Public Amusements

... Tbe Board. Is now co'mpnsed of eight t vis Chartists. tewe Conservatives, and two gentlemen Iwn who usually vote with the Whigs, ' up -An Anierican pappr -states th'at General Ton'l shi Thum b was lately artested- in- Sav>annah, and fined lei ten dollart ...

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 ...

Literature

... [im- medateandvisbleeffctwil hatenthestruggle, and it is the part oprudence to be prepared fr It. The decomposition of the Whigs, and the untrustworthiness of the Tories, compel men to turn their eyes to other parties, but the present effect of' the search ...

LITERATURE

... ways were betrayed by his disposition to make ± sarcastic remarks on leading characters of the day, sparin neither tory nor whig. Yet his was ever n playful kind of sareasmn, entirely free from any bitter alloy o misanthropyand. rancour. To such feelings ...

Reviews

... Pretender's landing, even weeks after, Fontenoy and Mar- d shal Saxe, the Queen of Hungary and her wrongs-that pet subject of the Whig papers, -and grumblings against the ministers or about Hanover, supplied papers with what in y the present day we should term ...

THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... eloquence in the writings that bear his name, not to seem to us in the main trust- worthy. He was a talking vain man, says the Whig bishop, who bad long been in the king's favour, and had such an opinion of his own faculty of persuading, that he thought ...

Reviews

... landing, even weeks after, Fontenoy and Mar- a ud shal' Saxe, the QUeeD of -Hungary and her wrongs-that pet subject of the Whig papers, -and grumblings against the ministers or about Hanover, supplied papers with what in by the present day we should term ...

EDINBURGH REVIEW, No. 189

... ministers and a L- oiesiso n3rmn; ansu We are not without hopes that we shall continue to flourish and advance even under a Whig Government and a free and commercial policy. Atid since we entirely disagree with Mr. Johnston as to the decay, both actual ...

REVIEWS

... the Pre- ns mier seems to be intended as an exposition of pi the Church of England Quarterly's views on the wn policy of the Whig Government, with reference sa as well to the Catholic question, generally speak- x ing, as to the state of things brought about ...

Literary Extracts

... utilt- btutt nit, tarian' of those dlays. 'We have also Leofrics iil our Owen his I Y time; we call tceuc conformists, or whigs. Nor has red I ;he Godiva died out of the land; we call her-bless her heart so ta with loving-kiicdness, and consecrate every ...