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Reynolds's Newspaper

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Reynolds's Newspaper

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 ...

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 ...

LITERARY MISCELLANEA

... party in power, when blunders of every kind have moat severely tried the patience of the ation. The Premier is one of the few Whigs who have profited by their Conservative education; he was a pupil of Pitt, and a contemporary of GreovillJ and Csatlereaegh ...

LITERARY MISCELLANEA

... Quakers and Ctle Tories joined to raise a formidable clamour. The Teries exulted in the prospect of winning two seats from the Whigs. The whole king- dom was divided between 9touts and Cowpers. At the summer assizes, Hertford was crowdasL with anxious faces ...

REVIEWS OF BOOKS

... alosraos The antheor himself wee a heroug goin Wicighe ha held officesi under Whig adcasneitratsosh eevdtepeerage fromn the hands of the Whigs e~,i at elived and died a Whig. The period heI lce o h commencemenit of L'is great work WyeS just that when the ...

REVIEWS OF BOOKS

... his own fireside. At the ball, across the green, live4 his is-toed Mr. (bflsy, ldch sereiff in 17111, who was in politics a, Whig, and in religion a Nonconformist-one of the rega- lar old Paritan school. Hes kept a ossidlent disenti~ng mi'nister as chaplain; ...

REVIEWS OF BOOKS

... him. Such an incident did how- ever occur, once '10 my knowledge, perhaps oftener. Sir Henry Vavasoun an old major-general, a Whig strongly verging towards Radicalism, himself of very ordinary appearauce, was invited, on his arrival at Paris, to a soiree ...

LITERARY MISCELLANEA

... wered by tes laudanum. 'Mr. Fox was nervous beforespeaking; Iso, I have heardi was Lord Plunkett. A distinguished member of the Whig party, now no more, and who was himself one of the- most sensitive of men -and one bf the must attractive of orators, told ...

REVIEWS OF BOOKS

... Richmond. He was neither liberal in his views nor consistent in his conduct. He com- rnenced life as a Tory, ratted to the Whigs at the time of the passing of the first Reform Bill, then veered round to early opinions, became the most virulent opponent ...

OPENING OF THE INTERNATIONAL EXHIBITION OF 1862

... the Cinque Ports, leader of the Nrouse of Com- mons, President of the Ramsey Mechanics' Institute, part author of the New Whig Guide, Prime Minister of England; and, to the closest observer, his age appeared to range between thirty. five and thirty-five ...

REVIEWS OF BOOKS

... principles, founded on common humanity and juntioe, the triunph of which we owe to the courage and the practical good sense of the Whig party; before the example of a Court, virtuous, humane, and beneficent; the altitude of the British upper classes has undergone ...

REVIEWS OF BOOKS

... the last moment the Dake of. Wellington igave uip his perilocat attempt, and the humiliated manaroh was forced to reosll the Whigs. William IV received Lcuds Grey and Broughsam under the influence of mortifi- cation, which he did not uffect to disguise; ...