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Daily News (London)

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 ...

LITERTURE

... the original work is the biography of Charles James Fox, by M. Ville- main, who warmly eulogises the memory of our i great whig statesman as the champion of civil and i religious liberty in a season of conflict and trial. t Upon the whole, we perceive ...

LITERATURE

... admniratiou, of the great achievements and salutary t designs of the Consulate, which M. Thiers has ex- of pressed. The English Whigs, who applauded the re peace of Amiens, were of opinion that the rule of E Kapoleon, at that time, held out some promise, not ...

LITERATURE

... not discuss the question with him, His opi- g a ion may serve to indicate the character of his his- ou- tory-whig after the traditions of the whigs-gene- -.of the tim {- 1 d treat' ~ ~ = have access to dul ?? any. e. du 9But hzsnarrative is in themain oil ...

ART IN CARPETS

... engineers, bas nlotyet been replaced on the ?? .ourci~. THE REPwzSENTATION OF NEWASTON-TYIE. -Mr. Somerset Beaumont, brother to the whig member for South Northumberland, and connected with the extensive banking firm of Messr Iimbton and Oo., offers himself in ...

LITERATURE

... sent forth of .her having ex- pired that her Majesty recovered a warmth in her of breast and one of her arms. Dr. Mead, with whig 1 boldness, held out against the Jacobite physicians, 0 and predicted that the Queen would certainly die wer Ein one hour. ...

LITERATURE

... ments on the diplomatic correspondence. However, in the year of reactions, 1849, it was not to be expected that either the Whig Government of Great Britain, or the Orleanist aned Fusionist Government of France, would protect Venice, or stand there between ...

LITERATURE

... iiestai~ahwnt wherewil be presentedt meOse, and whoUple.Isup b t.* l s tlver athest i~OfevntI I'w=1%ft ''Fj buyth~mk Or th.f Tto Whig stadinM g pqbeo ban album. :* Ii-mani t Mr.r mist. W.ur Sinwa ~~ Sts: roif'nauclm. fN4 d,lh Usmost~l Pat P~t5'of heuowe.(4yg ...

LITERATURE

... becanme con- t vicul of ile iminitiency of its danger and when c th. House of Lords wet:S on the eCV- of once more ,a ?? the -whig hill, William IV. undertook to .t lisimn a smfficieont uortion of the opposition by a s i--snuial apipeal to the peers. On ...

LITERATURE

... treatment of the wemarkable period to which, these per- n sons belnd, h been hitherto wofully one t sided; it was either the keen Whig Presbyterian all for'the Covenant, and admitting no flaw in its d adherents,-no virtue in its enemies; or the stanch v episcopal ...

LITERATURE

... be hated the very thought of office. He was one of that me- morable coalition between the Grenville tories and the Foxite whigs which, after submitting to be bullied by the King in 1807, first into withdrawing one-half of a miserable measure of concession ...