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Manchester, Lancashire, England

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50

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Literary Reviews

... Washingtonv..g. - a I Ii. r Frie '0A6u.ii , ~ , . 'd lad -Popl li A'rA B N 1'ils Lno No be , -Oa ieethe101 Iarp ?? ?? yte D By W~hi'g~9Irrri_. D ?? fuifg b .r~ad It -is healthy sign of I re times ?? ;r..1 t not ai.ela tti' e d'em prov Ten euddle 8claFei ...

Literary Extracts

... Reviewv:- m The Parliament House, probably never saw, and asay ;hnever see again, such a brothet-hood of legal talent as the n- whig lawyers of 1813: Clerk, Cranstaoun, Jeffrey, Moucraiff, of Cockburn, Fnllerton, formed a~ phalanx, who for years kept ap the ...

Literary Extracts

... hat L)ns8 greeditness, its deep ats a well, tiud as tootling as t e old scr- rev. her- pent, wh~ile.sill his govecueneuts, whig tand tory tgike, woik wit eats for his'aggratidisemenet with a zeal v~ibih never flags, and a thet ten. Sagacity which never ...

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 ...

Literary Notices

... think it also an admirable touch to in where 1Fallen (who lies descended in his miseries to Butt he, tilepaid agent of both whig and jacobite) is made to froni excuse his time-serving by his love to his children ; for and tbat shows the susceptibility ...

Literary Extracts

... Crown atad Ancbher o I, Tavern, to celebrate the birthday of Mr. Fox. The company II *s assembled was unusually numerouis. The whigs, and friends T~ if of freedom in general, resolved to make a graud deinloustra- d e tion, to show that their confidence in ...

Spirit of the Press

... hands. ehaeonequently seen all the inflnen- usL of tial newspapers and period ioals, whether in the interest ilh ut- of the whigs or- tories, join in warning the middle class ne of against the dang-er of ruitning our agriculture by adopting dii i gthe small ...

Literary Extracts

... pains for that purpose; but whenl once l, is mitid was scude up, it was impossible to itifluence him. ?? politics, he was a whig of ihifi, which became him, lit ocihed, however, by all the experience of the prescen hI, age. Hel wished to see our society ...

SELECTIONS FROM THE NEW REVIEWS & MAGAZINES

... virtually conceded. The Sop- La: 50 tennial Act is a stain upon onr annals. It records the fact, def 0- that in] 1716 the Whigs tltoagitt that a majority of the electors Bu If, was agatnst them, anad took this most unconstitutional mode the I of saving ...

SELECTIONS FROM THE NEW REVIEWS & MAGAZINES

... iiter~afted 810,000. 'Thent - was the tise to have adopted a bold and liberal course in the polities and manegement of the great whig organ. But thatt Fwould not lsave suited the personal views of Mr. (now Sir I John) Eastbope. The goldets opportunity was lost ...

Literary Notice

... Riteravp POtice. LHisoiry of the Whig NMinisti-y of 1830 to the .Passing Of the 1?efor-m Bill. By John Arthur Roebuc~k, M.F. 2 vols. 8vo. John W. Parker and Son,1 r Teredon, 1852. r Teeis scarcely an event of greater importance in the a' history of this ...

SELECTIONS FROM THE NEW REVIEWS & MAGAZINES

... that occasion the tortes were assembled in such force, that had the roof of the theatre fallen in, or been pulled down by a whig Samson, it would have annihilated the party. From the cheers of Oxford undergraduates the Duke of Wellington and Sir Robert ...