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DEATHS

... command. We had at that meek rehab as . apple. t rt. P.m, Mune, di top Mite Ma he m mamba it. arra bk. Atm mar . Wee bttlso Whig chg.; sad. asked *MU.. Mr Black d.igeed to The following observe.. am made by a FronOil oat., THE INDIAN MAIL. time a Imp porfi ...

Published: Wednesday 13 February 1856
Newspaper: Witness (Edinburgh)
County: Midlothian, Scotland
Type: Illustrated | Words: 21028 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

ELECTIONEERING WRITING. TO TIM ZDITOR 01 THU BCOTTISII. PREM

... sworn supporters they are--one of them having high name and receiving large emoluments in that character. Again, Mr Black is • Whig per excellence, rather, considering his views of ecclesiastical matters, a Radical—if not nitro as such—and yet we are instructed ...

Published: Friday 15 February 1856
Newspaper: Scottish Press
County: Midlothian, Scotland
Type: Article | Words: 659 | Page: 6 | Tags: none

A SPARK Of GOODIMIII

... courtiers. No one could trust his friendship for an hour. His friends speedily polled him, and be as speedily threw them off. The Whigs must have expected his base desertion. In middle age his friends were table companions. As be crew old he preferred young guardsmen ...

Published: Friday 15 February 1856
Newspaper: Scottish Press
County: Midlothian, Scotland
Type: Article | Words: 457 | Page: 6 | Tags: none

lOW well never ' that _ _Ave taken • they weld have , lord, • baronet – „a (Mr Black) coming 1•91_

... lOW well never ' that _ taken • weld have , lord, • baronet - „a (Mr Black) coming 1•91_. man. _ Whigs would their candidate if have the son of a ___ or the Fon Of a baronet ; and that he sck) was merely the warming-pan for the coml. limn—for Lord ...

TORY TENDENCIES TO PERSONALITIES

... reverenced as the prince of political philosophers and osators. And why was all this difference? If Burke had been a ridiculous Whig, he could only have become a ridiculous Tory. If there anything essentially ludicrous in the one case, it was equally ludicrous ...

sod no wonder he is an invalid,—he smug to Gems down to the 'Louse; ou which that stickler for hereditary

... the accession to political power of this thoroughly respectable antagonist class. There are two other parties, —the Reriele Whig. and the Blaehrood Mag.iwe Tories,—whom the extension of the franchise would leave exactly they are, —unless, indeed, in the ...

Published: Saturday 16 February 1856
Newspaper: Witness (Edinburgh)
County: Midlothian, Scotland
Type: Article | Words: 3841 | Page: 2 | Tags: none

188 157 845 152 117 269

... lists will show, without these 'helps' the Whig candidate would have been nowhere ' in the race. With such helps,' including the mass of voters who were Snit declared and pointed out as disqualified by the Whig district lists, and then brought to the poll ...

Spirit of the Press

... been graced by all sections of the fast-fading dis- tinctions of Whig and Tory. He is a Conservative in accordance with the spirit and progress of the age. We call that an enlightened Whig-but let that pass with all now antiquated differences. Suffice it ...

Published: Monday 18 February 1856
Newspaper: Caledonian Mercury
County: Midlothian, Scotland
Type: Article | Words: 6774 | Page: 4 | Tags: News 

THE LATE CITY ELECTION. TO THE EDITOR OF THE SCOTTISH PRESS

... Emancipation from:what? Independence of whom? From King Log to King Stott, cliques are certainly odious and injurious things, but Whig and political avast for civil and political objects and ends are cansisstent,,congenial, and leas injurious and intolerable ...

Published: Tuesday 19 February 1856
Newspaper: Scottish Press
County: Midlothian, Scotland
Type: Article | Words: 980 | Page: 6 | Tags: none

SAYINGS OP BTDNET SMITH

... one of Lydia White’s small and most agreeable dinners, in Park Street, the company (most of them, except the hostess, being Whigs) were disenasing, in rather querulous strain, the desperate prospects of their party. Ye'*,’ said Sydney Smith, we are in most ...

Published: Tuesday 19 February 1856
Newspaper: Edinburgh Evening Courant
County: Midlothian, Scotland
Type: Article | Words: 3037 | Page: 4 | Tags: none

*mmitarp

... knew amazingly little of the subject. The movement looks strange, almost suspicions, were it not that, although Lord Monteagle Whig, he does not go steady in harness, and often throws his leg over the traces. At the same time, one is led to wonder who inspired ...

Published: Tuesday 19 February 1856
Newspaper: Scottish Press
County: Midlothian, Scotland
Type: Article | Words: 2408 | Page: 5 | Tags: none

TABLE TAI . K OF SA 3 IUED ROGERS

... _Whites _small and roubt _agreeable dinnera , in _Park _Street , the _company ( _most of them , except the hostess , being _Whigs ) were _discussing , in _rather a querulous _strain , the _desperate prospects of their party- _- * . Yes , * said Sydney Smith ...

Published: Wednesday 20 February 1856
Newspaper: The Scotsman
County: Midlothian, Scotland
Type: Article | Words: 2153 | Page: 4 | Tags: none