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Daily News (London)

LITERATURE

... that his sincere opinions are those T] ekpressed in the book. The greatest whig of our ci own time-perhaps the only capable and qualified tu exponent now surviving of the genuine whig tradi- ex tions-is surely worth listening to when he relates Ju the course ...

LITERATURE

... truth there is in its caustic portraitures of whigs dead and living, but also much of the peon- liar view that Lord Brougham's feelings tempt him now to take of them. An entirely reliable estimate of the whigs as a party, and of the surviving members of ...

LITRATURE

... much-is jpcrhaps the best in the number. The writl author rates Whig principles and Whig otatesmen intel rather too high; h ut onf the whole his analysis ?? Whig, literature, Whig politics, and Whig society isth acute,1 and the style in ...

LITERATURE

... say; but the chief character of the ?? Belmore-is obviously, in some respects, the fictitious counterpart of a cele- brated Whig Lord who, some sixty years ago, used to gather about him, at his old suburban mansion, all the wits, poets, essayists, and ...

SIR D. LEMARCHANT'S LIFE OF LORD ALTHORP

... asked by some members of the Whig party in the House of Commoinst to consider their opinion that i theyoupht to make him theirleader. His own Opiniol asa in favou~r of Brougham, whom it w found, however, that many of the Whigs would not followr. Hie then ...

LITERATURE

... construction. It is Pri, upon higher grounds, however, that the author an( commands our attention, as the expounder of genuine Fiu whig traditions, in that liberal nnd popular sense in. occ -which Charles Fox is understood to have practised cot: them. cht The ...

COLLEGE HISTORIES

... Christopher Wren was at Wadham from 1649 to 16M3. In the early part of the eighteenth century Wadham was a Whig college, and after the death of its great Whig NAWarden, Dunster, it fell on evil tirues. At the period of the Wxford Movement Wadhant was on the ...

CURRENT LITERATURE

... Harl6f ShoelbfifieoMW'- luillati) ndbrabes 'the pberiod betsween the death of Chatham and the memorable dissolution ot the ,Whig( party,' consequent uponte.V `ae antii.Gallioan Yronzy whioh was attributable in so great a degree to thle inflammatory pa ...

Literary Prospects

... entirely contrary to history and .n character. On the other hand, our pessi. nist se discovers, David Balfour was a Whig. Still, he Awas a loyal Whig, and only drank to the Rp-- ts toration when he was hali dead with thirst, ant i D. could not get a drink nn ...

PUBLIC MEN ON PUBLIC AFFAIRS

... attack; made upou them had appeared the Edinburgh under the title of '• Plain Whig Principles. The editor laid down a number propositions which were jt plain, and which were not Whig, and which were only conspicuous for the absence of any principle at all ...

LITERATURE

... delusion beyond any man of his titne. 'It is the peculiar glory of Fox, Erskine, and the stedfast, un- tainted remnant of the whig party, that fronm the first' they protested agaiwst the policy, Justice of the tear, 'and the propriety of interfering WtAh ...