THE GLASGOW SHOWS OF OLDEN TIME

... ? Clsailnher.'of Commerce of t' Glasgow, ;1'0784';. betwq bi 200- ?? -oo individeala Fere entolled as n ksu'g roportiln of whigm wre cotton I I q i i I i i i I I i m . i i i a i I i 1 I ,s and Ubse& snanufacturers. IThe fees of admission were five. Ir ...

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 ...

FASHION AND VARIETIES

... evary direction. His Excellency the If Lord Lieutenant danced with Lady Alice Hill, and honoured her with marked attention.- Whig. The Lord Chancellor has been graciously r pleased to appoint William Johnston, Esq., of the town of n Cavan, as Borough Magistrate ...

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 ...

SUFFOLK INSTITUTE of [ill]

... who used his wvhole influence, and gave £500 into the bargain, to the Bury Corporation, to secure their re- turning two good Whig Members tn support the House of Hanover, and his son Lord Hervey, George II 's minister, have got the younic Prelender close ...

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 ...

LITERATURE

... of Macaulay's last volume. It is an able, just, though slightly depreciatory criticism. Macaulay his viewed history from the Whig side, and, however de. lightful his narrative, it is too party coloured to stanl the test of time, though it will always remain ...

LITERATURE

... which wao awarded by the geneval voice of the public. But we are afrain the palmn das of BlaCicood are gone where the old Whigs and the spinning wheels ore going. Sometimes it does give us again a gleam of that talent which once made it so famons. But ...

FASHION

... Gieale, and widlow of Sir Marcus Sonmerville, Bart.- The de- ceased nobleman had for many years been a zealous supporter of the Whig parly, and had done good sel-- vice to his political triemids during his long cai-ou- in time House of Commons, more rspecially ...

LITERATURE

... Doat one c-hit more flittering then the answer Yi given to the some question a month age by abs organ of ourfrionds sq the Whigs. Na one has yet sptoken up toe the lRodiralse: perhaps eoy Mrl. Bright ciii give us his notietts onl the present state of affairs ...

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 ...

TABLE TALK

... In the whole community, has baen, and is at the present moment, Mr. S. R. Graves, the Mayor. All classes of politicians, Whigs, Tories, and Radicals—the ladies, too, that section of society which rules all classes—are unanimous in sounding the praises ...