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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 ...

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 ...

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 ...

LITERATURE

... do not very well. comprehend to fi ever what Umnbtro we ror to leek to fertui en innimediate party. u 13 X* Are we to turn Whigs, or are the roinsent to become Con- o ietnt, servatives ? This is thle usina question. is Peel'ns star of ii who poe rSaly ...

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 ...

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

... men shouid be unable to de eat the vines ,which were hidden under that show of pi emature sobriety. Spencer was a whig, unhappily for the whig party, whioh, ?? the unhonoured and unlamented clese ol his life, wag mor'c than once brought to the verge of ruin ...

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 ...

GREAT REFORM DEMONSTRATION AT THE STANDARD THEATRE

... the IAtra e snssd, and The CcAmntAr'o, rose, end in the convas of a lee'gtb. sued eddrfors tre'arded t upn the coenduc ef t Whigs as regarded reforma. The Derby Bofatni Bil w'ths just sunh a one -as might ha e 'been expected from Wlthe Confarvative Government ...

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 ...