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Glasgow Herald

NOTES FROM EDINBURGH

... middle oi the House ot Lords, as to ward off the airs and chills that wander through that vast gilded chamber. No malicious Whig has as yet, so far as know, applied to him the saying about those who live in glass houses, nor transferred from Lord Beac ...

LITERARY BLUE-BOOK

... Heuse blue-book dispels many popular beliefs current in society. Thus the often-repeated story that Lord Macaulay had sold his Whig history to the Messrs. Longman for an annuity is to be upset by the Custom House fact that the old histolrian is the proprietor ...

LITERARY NOTES AND GOSSIP

... the AcederrvoJ MI E EownD AnNor.nD will publish in the autumn the Diaries of George Howard, seventh Earl of Carlisie, the Whig statesman of thic middle of the century, who is best known in hi-tory 7s havinul been twice Lord-Lieutenant of Ireland. Th ...

THE QUARTERLY REVIEW ON MR. GLADSTONE

... de& own power, and that of those aho thougbh with him, may have hbeu ?? 2vitong. A lasting occupation of 'dfite, snub as the Whigs rjnjed after the death of Qoeea Arne,ard ?? ?? Bill, in wnich the subemee of an all-powerful. Minister swould not be menaced ...

LITERATURE

... changes, 'the lot k-fell upon Whig, which was 'very significative, as well as It ready; being vernacular in Scotland, from whence it was - borrowed, for corrupt and sour whey. Defoe accepts this i le derivation of Whig; and says.the use of it began in ...

OMNIA [ill]

... the watcb, See clearly tbat the cil ?? tiJ Can only reach us when wsrev- wen Ben's gloriou, policy of 6iwaae For this the Whigs wvre trn,-l - ?? No more with bw.i;g biL, tJ ;Pi- And Gladstoneafromz tfivw,:i a 'f Is lamed aS badly as Her.b.A Now turned ...

THE PRINCE OF WALES AT THE PARIS EXHIBITION

... been lately favoured on the vexed question,-What, under present circumstances, should Reformers do? The veteran chief of the Whigs, wise by experience, and calm in his comparative seclusion from the jar and turmoilof thefray, judges more justlythan some ...

THE BIG FIGHT IN ARGYLL

... Lorn to Islay's Wsle, icn From Muck to Colousay, cb From Rum to Tobermory, -II The fiery cross was sped, _ e And roused up Whig and Tory . Pl Came the sons of Colin, Ono Came the sons of Callum, Po Came the big Mbic-M1acs iorg (impossible to spell ?? ...

FLOWER SHOWS

... tho display. The centre roonl was set apart fur the pot plants; the fruit, &c,. were laid out in the north wing, the south whig being occtleid by a spltedid array of cut flowers; the vegetables were displayed in the open square in front of the schooL ...

LIFE OF SIR RICHARD

... of the rake and a little of the ht swindler. Nor is this all Sir Richard Ir has to answer for at the hands of Xn the great Whig historian. When whispering ae tongueshad poisoned truth and all but brokeup ey the life-long friendship between Addison ...

LITERATURE

... sequel; so far as our limits - permit, - to -- - estimate, Mr f Christie's judgment of - the - ekbeer - of the founder -of the Whig party; --.but w-ov Aiopot that, though our literature is still without an: adequate monument of one'of its most &rilliant ornaments ...

OLD AND NEW FASHIONS IN DRESS

... colour, with buttons half way up the arm sr .i on the outside. Blue and red marked the Tory wearer, and blue A it- and buff the Whig. The Radicals were then in the shell, for if ui is any one of a more liberal feeling called out reform too pi loudly, he ...