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Edinburgh, Midlothian, Scotland

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24

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19
5

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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 ...

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 ...

Literary Notices

... Churcll, and indulged at my father's table, on every fitting opportunity, in invectives aigainst thle Presbyte. rians; and Whigs, as if it had hben on purpose to rebuke his benefactor for having conformed, and enjoying the emolnaents wshiel1i ministcred ...

A REVIEW OF THE SESSION

... have not been filled by the supporters of the Government. Contrast the con-. duct of Sir R. Peel with the small coterie of Whigs. He found a school of statesmen who have handed his name down to this day; and he took them without reference to rank, fortune ...

Literary Notices

... from Mir Fitzpatrick's Life, Times, and Correspondence of Doctor Doyle- some cunious secrets also as to how parties, both Whig and Tory, have worked the oracles of priest- hood in Ireland during the past half century ; it is much to be regretted, however ...

Literary Notices

... cusses at considerable length, and in a tone of contemptuous indignation, the charges brought against the accuracy of the great Whig historian by Mr Paget in his New Examen; or, an In- quiry into the Evidence Relating to certain Pas- sages in Lord Macaulay's ...

Literary Notices

... l.,as a clerk, while at the samle time he continules his studlies at the Iiniversitr. h~is employeyrs b~eing agents for the Whig Earl of Carrabas, Normian is present along w it-h M~r Shear away, who (eles the p~olitical business of the firn, at an clection ...

SKETCHES OF BRITISH STATESMEN

... Peel and of GOlad- m stone; for Lord' Stanley, from the time he, left College, hau never been a Consirvative. Neither is he a Whig. Nor can he, I think, beset down| ti' as a Radical. It is ,quetionable indeed whether cc his views could' be embodied in any ...

Literary Notices

... in the following remarks, in a vindication of itself prefixed to the magazine a few years after:- 'In a series of years the Whigs in Scotland had all the Jones to themselves. They laughed and lashed as theyliked; and while this was the case, did anybody ...

Literary Notices

... aggrieved whets he is called a Whig, and charged with W~hig liartialities. We find that be himself gloiied in the name. In one of his Edin- burgh addresses he speaks as follows: I look with pride on all that the Wh~igs have done for the cause of human ...

MAGAZINES FOR THE MONTH

... is also distinguished for its ad- vocacy of peace principles, and- is strongly op- posed to capital punishments. The Timens (Whig) is edited by Henry Raymond, the Spleaker of the aew Hlouse of Rlepresentatives, and is, we believe, a reliable paper for general ...

QUARTERLY REVIEW FOR JANUARY

... others, tr for the weli-known lines- , Vor a very small man with the To'ies Is a very great man with the Whigs.' e- But since he became the ' New Whig Guide' himself we have not heard of his pursuing this vein of pleasan- t try. ot 5S- al me, be be Lse ...