THE INTERNATIONAL EXHIBITION

... who, if as witty as she is here drawn beautiful, must indeed have justified the praise bestowed on this great toast of the Whigs. Now that the pictures are being hung, the light from thle gallery roof is found to be per- fect. As a rule, very few of the ...

Our Library Table

... while he maintained the rights of the Established Church, to repeal or greatly modify those harsh laws with which Whig Governments and Whig Parliaments had encumbered the statute book. He Was honestly desirous of placing upon a footing of perfect equality ...

LITERARY NOTICES

... by F. Guizot, Ambiaseador from His Majesty Louis Philippe, we find the following sketch of the late Earl Grey:- This great Whig leader, who after having for forty- four years given the example of staunch fidelity to his principles, had met with the nlre ...

Court and Fashion

... considered hopeless. Lord Breadalbane, by his energy, his talents, and his vast, possessions, was long a valuable member of the Whig party in Scotland. As Earl of Ormelie, before his suc- cession to the peerage, he stood, in 1832, a contest for the representation ...

Literary Notices

... aggrieved whets he is called a Whig, and charged with W~hig liartialities. We find that be himself gloiied in the name. In one of his Edin- burgh addresses he speaks as follows: I look with pride on all that the Wh~igs have done for the cause of human ...

THE INTERNATIONAL EXHIBITION

... apatronage at the disposal of the present governeut. It has been Sir John Harding's fate to advise the govement Fr(whether Whig or Tory) on the international questions that e arose during the Russian and Italian wars, on the affair of t the Charles et ...

SKETCHES OF BRITISH STATESMEN

... Peel and of GOlad- m stone; for Lord' Stanley, from the time he, left College, hau never been a Consirvative. Neither is he a Whig. Nor can he, I think, beset down| ti' as a Radical. It is ,quetionable indeed whether cc his views could' be embodied in any ...

FASHION AND VARIETIES

... Stauley, twin brother of Lord Stanley of Alderley. Mr. Ilowe was refused admission to this usacrod enclosure of artstocrrtic Whigs on the suspicion ttuat he writes to tile Times. But wrhy a member of the Illustrious htou-e of Stailey wvas excitded is a question ...

LITERARY MISCELLANEA

... wered by tes laudanum. 'Mr. Fox was nervous beforespeaking; Iso, I have heardi was Lord Plunkett. A distinguished member of the Whig party, now no more, and who was himself one of the- most sensitive of men -and one bf the must attractive of orators, told ...

LITERARY EXTRACTS

... LITERARY EXTRACTS. - ?? ~ .- - - - NERvOUSnESs.-A distinguished member of the Whig party, now no more, and who was himself one of the most sensitive of men and one of the most attractive of orators, told me that once, in the House of Commons, he had crossed ...

THE INTERNATIONAL EXHIBITION

... rf the Cinque Ports, Leader of the House of Commons, President of the Romsey Mechanics' Institate, part author of the Nent Whig tGuide, Prime Minister of Englaud ; and, to the closest observer, his ago appeared to range between thirty-five and tbirty-fiveland ...

A BOURBONIST PICTURE OF ITALY

... a statesman to-day which I will repeat. e He observed-' You are talking munch about the s. occupation of Rome because the Whigs are in ~, power, but let the Torles coma ha and Bngland wil r, sulpport the Pope with foreign armns. Net a Tor apeke for ...