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A STORY OF SIXTY YEARS SINCE*

... imperious days, finds himself unpopular in society, though the Tory leaders pay him attention, in order to win him over from the Whig interest, and Lady Alice, the daughter of the I)uke of Preston, coquettes with him in a distracting manner for the sake of ...

MISS AUSTEN*

... unlike Miss Mitford. She loved Scott's poceis ; Miss Mitford sneered at them. She was a zealous Jacobite; and Miss Mitford was a Whig. The latter hated Crabbe ; the former worshipped him. These tastes, however, make no appearance in her novels. Indeed, such ...

THE JANUARY MAGAZINES

... lavish for the sake of preserving the unity and indivisibility of their national life. We quite agree with Mr. Froude, that the Whig panacea for colonial discontent-namely, the formation of a number of self-governing communities-has tended to lessen the h ...

LORD RUSSELL ON THINGS IN GENERAL*

... thse Try ?? w\iecthem hie wvorld take thle same view of'he tmaterifa LonservativeGoern inemit shotihl ever have to' threaten a Whig majority in ?? ne crelavions. W~ill, however, remain in tile minds of somec ajoghsraesa olpef question. Coming bache to the ...

THE MAGAZINES FOR JULY

... possession of the land. If in his Reform Bill Mr. Disraeli had boldly insisted on manhood suffrage, he might have dished the Whigs most thoroughly. Dr. Sandwith is very severe on Earl Russell for his strictures on the doings of the Commune. He compares ...

THE READER

... the Bishop of Exeter as the obscene renegade Phillpotts, and Queen Adelaide as a nasty German frow. Mr. Molesworth is a Whig, and makes no secret of it; but he does his best to write with impartiality, and we think his statements may generally be accepted ...

Published: Saturday 25 November 1871
Newspaper: Graphic
County: London, England
Type: | Words: 2026 | Page: 11 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture 

Magazines

... leading article in Fraser appears to be written for the purpose of inducing the Orangemen to desert the Tories and join the Whigs. Though -he prints the paper, Mr. Froude in a note advises the Orange. men to do nothing of the kind so long as English Liberalism ...

THEATRES

... vehicle for political satire, and, readapting it in 1717 under the namne of The NYoiy/uror, won at once the favour of the Whigs and the hatred of the Jacobite party. Half a century later, how. ever, a change had come over the spirit of parties. The satirical ...

Scraps

... colour is Conservative and what colour is Liberal. We may reply that it is not very easy to answer this question offhand. The Whig toast at one period was Buffand blue, and Mrs. Crewe, and when the Edinburgh Review appeared in 1802 it indicated its Liberal ...

THEATRES

... real and fictitious, belong to the period of the story -the reign of William the Third-in something more than in name. His Whigs and Jacobites are men of the time, with all the prejudicec, political and social, of that troubled period, and lastly his dialogue ...

Magazines

... the labours of the judges. There is no desire on the part of the public for this cheese-paring tendency, but it has been a Whig tradition for years past that retrenchment was a sure road to popularity, and hence au the shabby attempts to save which rendered ...

Magazines

... both being ladies, and both assuming the masculine name of George. One can tell, by the way, that the Tories are in and the Whigs out, by the absence of those slashers which Maga used every month to let fall on Mr. Gladstone's head. Fraser puts forth ...