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Examiner, The

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The Examiner

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 ...

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 ...

THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... position in the house. The regular Opposition appears to have been limited to eighty-two. Of these, thirty were the nominees of Whig proprietors, and fifty-two represented the popular party. While there is no very weighty addition made by Mr Massey's new volume ...

THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... trains ought to attain-will certainly, cut out heavy work for the Volunteers, and perhaps enable the Zouaves to relieve the Whigs in Downing street. Captain Forbes's volume, which is sprinkled with Ice- landic stories and traditions, ?? De touna goot company ...

THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... had taught himself to earn a modest livelihood as a surveyor, Mr Lincoln was elected to the Legislature, chosen, although a Whig, by a constituency chiefly democratic. All his leisure he was then devoting to an intense studv of the law. After his fourth ...

THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... help, Lords Rockingham, Devonshire, Newcastle, and Grafton were alienated from the Government and driven to organise a strong Whig opposition. When the Grenville Ministry succeeded that of Lord Bute, his influence was still predominant. Work- ing behind ...

THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... with his assertion that no such words had been by him emploved, Fox's ready acceptance of Burke's declaration passed among the Whig leader's admirers for great candour and generosity. I But before he sat down, Fox again complained that his friend had used ...

THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... scorn than Sunderland. His son, Lord Spencer, after a word of respect for his love of books, appears only as a too passionate Whig who could see no danger to liberty except from kings; and the romantic story of his daughter's faithfulness to her pro- scribed ...

THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... letter was addressed from Lausanne to Lord Eliot in October, 1784, and it contains this passage: Yet let me soberly ask you on Whig principles, whether itbe not a dangerous discovery that the King can keep his favourite Minister against a majority of the ...

THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... said, but the little is said well. The political narrative is to show the distinct features of his character as a pure Whig, when Whig principles were the grounds of a well-defined course of action that had to be pursued against a toryism more an- ta-oonist ...

THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... fun of him for being a hairdresser's son: So I am, he replied; and I am come into the House to give a dressing to the Whigs. Yery characteristic is a saying of Nelson's. Soon after the victory of the Nile, Sir William Hamilton complained of the French ...

THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... King was determined not to be caught in the trap which was set for him; that be had taken alarm at the progress made by the Whigs, and said he should settle it all by turning out Canning. Bates comes from London, and brings with him our passports, c. He ...