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Daily News (London)

LITERATURE

... The wit and sense of Sydney Smith is, were certainly never intended to be bound up in three ta costly two guinea volumes. The whig party, thou h iot in power, Is by no means in the zen~ith of public ce estimation. And though we understand they pro- as, mise ...

LITERATURE

... prac- tical views maintaining their ground. The political article of the number is upon the Ml-dadmitistra- tion of the Whigs; a fertile subject, on which it may easily be inferred, that the dissatisfaction of the Church of England Quarterly arises ...

LITERATURE

... political vicissitudes to the Chief Jasticeship, had peculiar charms for him. And Mansfield, the tory, id thus indebtedtohis whig biograpberfor a greater meed of justiceand renown thanhe could perhaps havefound from abiographerwho wasnot absolutely a panegyrist ...

LITERATURE

... anti- pular or asuendancy faction, had pri combined in pulverising the once powerful whig party of us, IIreland. In l~ord Welflesley'h time, there wins a great whig I c=ncto, with considerable territorial influence and per. on, soa uhrlty-.the Boyles ...

LITERATURE

... differ from and profanation to attack; and as in many other instances we could point out. But then, to be sure, Mr. Rogers is a whig himself, and therefore his ultra reverence for the high- priests of the docteine must, we sppose, be pardoned him. rut espoe ...

LITERATURE

... lie hai not yet been able' to diacover who, hadb been,5 gufltj of this breach of'trust; that, in repriniting, soeverl Pez Whigs were omitted, altered, -or mangpled, Which laid him me under the necessity of having it again printed more cor- tol rectly ...

LITERATURE

... ath he a time when he had published nothin ; as Riding . enthe policy of the tories whoa he 'was 2t1 tan a horent ~ oe f the'whigs; as ?? to Dn. Harliy, and dean of St. Paitriik's, with a rapid .it o q ?? that ought for ever, to have. prevented Kinm rer ...

LITERATURE

... English cattle; the lion also preys on all the ;larger varieties of the antelopes, autI o'n both varieties of the gboO. lte xeusa Whig is .l;t with 7n lege x- 4bo8 -out the interior, is also a favourite object oftbis pursuit. Lions do not refuse, as has been ...

THE EXHIBITION OF 1851

... three candidates In the field to fill the vacancy caused by the decease of our late noble. I representative, Lead Nugeat, two whigs and one tory, via,, Mr. Hooghtoc, the gentleman who oppwed Qnlntin Dick at the last election; Mr. Seijeaut Bjlea. long known ...

FINE ARTS

... ~dptmG nt, baa not max1de the mot of hi nubjet and ast evidenitly,:has'had to drw; obig Ieijitlve &eultiee, *hich ar Unqual to Whig ?? po*er WRf: stiiiflg.:i 5p5llitOs, *artiaulirltc! ezaterni ubjects, should rea t .rjF4*.egarn ti 'telI'a zsto, or- at. least ...

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 ...

LITERATURE

... informa- tion which is gathered at the centre of affairs, not at the. extremities. Mr. Baines remained in parliament till the whigs were ousted in 1841, when, to all appearances, a tory reaction had set in, which he felt that it required you th to combat ...