REVIEWS OF BOOKS

... Speech, and Publication, I earnestly appeal to engage in thi struggle with redoubled ardour. Consider the insolence c the Whigs and their tyrannical majority. They keto tha by r'epealing the Taies oil Knowledge they might ensure th emaplyment of teos ...

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 ...

A NOVEL EXHIBITION OF FREE TRADE

... subscriptions, like the emissary of a begging-letter sonclave. To this employ- ment, however, one of the proudest members of our Whig aristocracy has actually stooped, calling, not very long ago, in person,-it was the first time he ever did so,-to pay his bill ...

Public Amusements

... theatre was taken on Wednes- wal Dyday night; for the benefit of. the wife and family of ~I a John J. Fussell, one of the 'Whig victims of 1848, var an- who is still suffering imprisonment in Totbill-fields whij le House of. Correction, and. from the ...

Public Amusements

... le theatre was taken on W.dsnes- ery day night for the benefit of the wife and. family of ad- John J. Fdssell, one of the 'Whig victiris'of :1848, on- who is still suffering imprisonment in Totbill-fields ies House of Correctioln, an'd from-the numerous-'at- ...

Public Amusements

... little theatre 'was taken o6nWednes- cry day night for the benefit of the wife and family of ad- John J. Fussell, one of the Whig victims of 1848, on who is still suffering imprisonment in Tothill-mields ies House of Correction, and from the numerous at- ...

LITERATURE

... itsl are not blinided by political parithlity, or led asvay by ali tile hol.Vy aild sodlhistical statelmenits oh tile geoat Whig ha t5st~itL en o file IsIl sre of theme chiar-ges ?? alny otie will be ignorant. Pa t.\'{ltrauityls ' Hls5ory eot Engugtid' ...

Reviews

... vriter's views, those, for instausce, iii referecume to the subject of cd acation, halive our eiitiie colicur- resco ; but the Whig pautisai bheuaks so couustantly out ini every page of the voliuiie, that wve caniiot afford cither oiur iespect or our sympathy ...

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

... Mr. IBurrowes never directly derived any office or honuar from ethat party to whose interests his life was devoted. The I Whigs overlooked him in 1807-or the petty situation of 1 counsel to the Revenue Commissioners is unworthy of no- I tice; and it only ...