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“ LORD MACAULAY.”

... that Mr Macaulay failed to grapple with the sturdy assailants of the Whigs. And afterwards, when lie returned from India, and when he became a Cabinet Minister” of the Melbourne Whigs, it was soon felt that Mr Macaulay could not stand in debate against ...

THE SCOTCH FREEHOLD MOVEMENT IN ENGLAND

... grievance. In Scotland, however, it has not been regarded with universal favour; for various reasons. It is a departure from the Whig track, and in Scotland the Liberals are very faithful to the principles which derived their name from Scotland. Again, the ...

THE CHINESE QUESTION

... policy. The Conservatives under Sir Robert Peel soon succeeded in upsetting the Whig Government which had begun the war, but they did not hesitate to cirry out all that the Whigs had begun, and Lord Ellenborough, who was even more declamatory against hostilities ...

THE DISSOLUTION OF PARLIAMENT

... the phrase) of that most eminent and respecte i name There ought to be no mistake. Every man calls himself Palmerstonian, he Whig. Tory, or Radical. Every one of them ought to compelled to prove his title to inarch under that banner. He ought either to ...

At Vicvbuk, BtbMtufb. M tka Stk ■—t Kiln v i. dauhtor of lfoodMouTEt^ Glengorry. * At Horiot Hill Homo, Edinborch,

... old. DEATH F. D. FINLAT, ESQ. OF BELFAST. regret to have to death of Mr F. D. Finlay, of Belfast, proprietor of the Northtm Whig. This sad event took place, wo nndcretood, at Glenarm. in the eounty of Antrim, on tho 10th lost. Mr Finlay was, for long aeries ...

Published: Tuesday 15 September 1857
Newspaper: Greenock Advertiser
County: Renfrewshire, Scotland
Type: Article | Words: 576 | Page: 3 | Tags: none

THE VACANT JUDGESHIP IN IRELAND

... s and five Roman Catholics in the Twelve Considerably more than two-thirds of the practising Bar are Protestants; but the Whigs desire to proportion the number of judges, not to the demarkations within the Hall of the Four Courts, but to the ratio of ...

OFFICIAL JOBBERY

... echoing all that is said in society about this colonial appointment. Lord Normanby undoubtedly did vast quantity of work for the Whigs in his peculiar way, and it is only natural that the Noble Marquis should desire to have the heir to his Marquisate advanced ...

TEMPTATION OF LORD JOHN RUSSELL

... te his lordship upon his being restored to his historical celebrity he is once more the time-honoured leader of the Whigs; he has recovered, we are happy to state, his unrivalled accomplish • ments and commanding reputation —in short, in the ...

NOTICE

... and Kilmalcolm Advertiser, Port-G!a«fow. Courier, Inverness. Evening Post, Dublin. Chronicle Limerick. Northern Whig, Belfast. Illustration, Paris. Maoasinks and Reviews. United Service Journal London. Art Journal, Bentley's Miscellany, rarer ...

BELFAST AND ITS RELIGIONS

... which Mr Hughes permitted himself to indulge—exaggerations that arw only to paralleled by the cool impudence of the Northern. Whig, in intimating to *tl>e Scotch Presbyterians and English Episcopalians, that they are the strangers the town The consequence ...

LORD JOHN RUSSELL AND THE PREMIER

... aw ! the piece, you say, is faulty; take it— I’m all submission : what you’d have it, make It. The more respectable of the Whig Liberal connection cannot but feel it as a great slur upon their distinguished parly that they have sunk so low to be compelled ...