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THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... accession to office as principal Secretary for Foreign Affairs, he became Under-Secretary. He subsequently served (after the brief Whig interval on Pitt's death) as a Lord of the Admiralty, still with Lord Mulgrave for his chief; blt in the latter part of his ...

REVIEWS OF BOOKS

... notoriously a mere puppet in tie-hands of n profligate aristocratic clique; which, auder the namessof s Conseivative or -a Whig administration-thimnbleriggs ma- joritics in Parliament, and uses up the Proletarians for its own profit and that of the m ...

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 ...

PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS

... splayasoo e Ho oas-en ooaitaLelatfllaO badof all eklnlt Who roalcined ittobeo TO.MOB.RQW Headayrg ane wntepid AIrnfate, ?? dN., whig ho re.el te he frmea m rabton toe daeplrpei On t groudylnt. 'ke balloon wil be eated atft~ernoon, Gaea tahtsand proceed ninag ...

THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... of State for Scotland. A few years later he entered Parliament; and, when he was forty-eight, having meanwhile promoted the, Whig interests in his native county, received from the Duke. of Newcastle the appointment of envoy, changed subsequently to that ...

THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... King would find him among the eminent men of his reign, but not among those whose rank will be confirmed by posterity. The Whigs, too, will observe -that none of their idols are brought forward: neither lampden, nor their Sidney, nor Russell. I think of ...

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 ...

PROVINCIAL THEATRICALS

... that, for there-imposition of it by him thecountry is wholly indebted to the previous financial blundering of the infernal Whigs, Sir Robert's mighty genius having, in 1842, no resource left but this odious tax to replenish an Exchequer which had been ...

Published: Sunday 08 September 1850
Newspaper: The Era
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 3039 | Page: 12 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture 

THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... is thought and motive in all he does, however trifling.' You know Burke and he were inseparables till the former left the Whigs; but their mutual regard, I believe, always con- tinued. Sir Philip told me that B'koe was convinced hedwas Junius; yet, before ...

LITERATURE

... humbug; and we cannot for the life of us make out in the pages of their report any, thing which will give us length of life. Whig Ministers will fob the populace with their creatures in commissions, picking their pockets under pretence of attending to their ...

Published: Sunday 29 September 1850
Newspaper: The Era
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 2073 | Page: 10 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture 

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 ...