THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... an American, Mr Frank Moore, through all the smoke of its own passion (1l). From files of Ameri- can papers of the day, both Whig and Tory, Mr Moore has taken the news that flew from town to town. The value of I these contemporary slips from papers inaccessible ...

LITERARY MISCELLANEA

... thy harmony-ohe lonely as- ny heart is filledwith rapture, and, as list to th Pirtd ear seems to drink in tlhe melody. Thy whig ee'. ry bring to memory other days. Oh, that it were thy Per ns to wait thauehte and wishes to loved ones iyan uersao u iglaly ...

THE COURANT PERPETRATING A JOKE

... so far from the Whig organ desiring to . promote the. return of Mr M'Laren, it has, on- grounds best known to itself and; .he: cliaue at its back, done: its un- principled best to misrepresent and decry him ! ?? Of course, the Whig organ did; and in ...

LITERATURE

... author of what would now be called a Liberal policy I t is necessarily a Whig. And here it is that we join Ii .1 issue with him. We deny that the radical distinc- a tion between Whigs and Tories is to be found in c D the character of their policy. This, ...

THE FRANKLIN EXPEDITION.*

... effect on his patient and long-suffering constituents. From all classes of Liberals -from the ardent Radical to the phlegmatic Whig-are heard curses not loud but deep, which threaten a speedy termination to the honourable gentleman's niarepresenta. ( ...

THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... Surprise an elegance, conceive a trope, And pose logicians with a line from Pope. Or young or old, no patriot more alone- Whigs claim him not, and Radicals disown. Ye modern liberal Benthamitic crew, Nought had that Gracchus in top-boots with you! Talk ...

LITERA TURE

... country with the splendid prerogatives of Majesty, th does not materially diffor from the constitutional mi idea of the English Whig, as it has been avowed fo: and practised among us since the Revolution of co 1688. We might extract from the speeches of an ...

LITERATURE

... previously to the Reform Bill agitation, pave the way for that milder and more docile species of Conservatism which, after the Whig forces of 1832 had fruitfully spent themselves, again appeared in the ascendant from 1841. to 1846, impersonated in Sir Robert ...

LORD DUNDONALD

... for his knee, ?? bad a blue coat with red E collar and cuffs, in iinitation of the Windsor r -niform, and, -as a homage to Whig principles, r he waes comptlled to wear yellow waistcoat and w brtepies. Th. tiied, the lad felt ridiculumi, v end he was umobbed ...

FASHION

... as advocate il 103, and at his death stood seventh on the list of the faculty. Ini politics lie was it steady ?? of the old Whig party; and in 1837, through the in- iluence of that pa rt, lie was chosen Lord Provost of the city. At tile coronation of her ...

REVIEWS OF BOOKS

... possessed was sufficient to make her fortune. She was, more. over, much cleverer than the other person, and much connected with the Whig ministry. She hadl wonderful powers of conversa- lion for a German, and could be very agreeable when she chose. The king was ...

LITERATURE

... rage, No heart more genuine beat-when off the stage. Macaulay takes his stand as one of the chiefs, if not the chief, of the Whigs in oratory, and is thus compared with Brougham and Burke:- In that rare gift-few gifts more rare in men- The twofold eloquence ...