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Daily News (London)

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 ...

THE PARIS EXHIBITION

... which appeared in the Daily Telegqraph with reference to the late Londonderry election, and for reprinting which the ii-thern Whig was brought into court at the last Donegal assizes, has again been tried at the Cavan assizes, this time in the form of a complaint ...

THE EARLY YEARS OF TEH PRINCE CONSORT

... to the period of her marriage had : indulged in strong feelings of political partisan- ship, her sympathies being with the Whigs, but , under Prince Albert's influence this feeling was . graduallyextinguished. The Prince on his marriage determined to stand ...

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

... of his brothers for other places in Gloucestershire. We thank Mr. Grantley Berkeley for exposing the gross jobbery of the Whigs in this case, though in doing so he confesses that he himself was in some respects an instrument in effecting it. Such abuse ...

LITERA TURE

... and poetic valentine by Lord Mac- aulay, a disussiou on the origin of red coats in the aarily, and of blue and buff as the whig colours, with meany oter curious odd and eids of literary jewelltry, hllichj will not hang together, though ?ael of tlthem ...

LITERATURE

... Statistical Review. By H. S. SKEATS. Arthur MialL The Irish Church figured very prominently in the speeches and writings of the Whigs twenty years ago. Leaders of parties and great organs of opi- nion treated its existence as an injustice and an affront to ...

Literature

... to get him into parliament. Percy, who is young and ambitious, is naturally delighted; until he learns that he isto go as a whig candidate to a close tory borough; and to oppose, without the slightest notice and by means of the most scandalous and unblushing ...

LITERATURE

... Tus tho the wastelthe w ad H w t, se] ieo th mach bt coud po th tnt At lsoist to lathe r tsed po Auks W. r como thhi00R Lrt whig , with at sOphy, and take pleasur bhe wd thosrg we ventu tathe igreate it u i o th bbe latd e sam~e ay besad .o telines heae% ...

LITERATURE

... humour. It is 3bard to meet Corneliusl O'Dfowd's delightfnl banter with a severe countenance; wemust take h sayings about Whigs and Liberal, about reform aud progress, as we do his conments upon foreign land andpeople, as the outpouring of a full and ...

Literature

... by as honest enemies, but by those who should have be been his friends. The very fact that the irr appointment came from a whig ministry was suf- b ficient, we are told, in the eyes of many, to imply tb at once reckless liberalism and encouragement of ...

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 ...