LITERATURE

... might be advisable to point the moral. T~t t which it enforces. But it poionts to nothing-neither to the in le gerdemain of Whig, or Tory, or Radical. It is a men we behr- Iant, not legislative antidotes. AJIl history has roved, all ese drue religion has ...

SATURDAY EVENING CONCERTS

... sir, I do not belleve your successors will require to have this hint given to them. (Hear, bear.) Whether they be Tories, Whigs, or Radtools-.(laughter)- they will all of thest be delighted to find that you have originated this graceful act, and they ...

LITERATURE

... comprehensiveness the Taxation of Ireland. He has described from a personal experience of many years the general course of Whig mal-administrmtion of Irish affairs; and in this pamphlet he tells with point and terseness, some times with eloquence, truths ...

LITERATURE

... hoist with their own petare, than thel Bill was shelved. Reform was not only abandoned, but treated with contempt by the Whig occupants of the Treasury Bench; and the Minister who had once shed tears when forced by his colleagues to postpone his Bill ...

THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... passed into the hands of the untitled younger! branch in 1782, James Graham, son of the Rev. Dr' Graham of Netherby, the first Whig in the family, his father and elder brother being lately dead, inherited the estates, and received from his father's political ...

LITERARY EXTRACTS

... who express the -political opinion of the i country, we find it subdivided :aain and again., There r are the Whigs of the old school, and the Whigs of the new; r; ?? who look back to the good old past, and the d Conservatives who look forward to the better ...

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

... first fifteen years of Sir James Gralianl's public life, the narrative being brought down to his final separation from the Whig party in the year 1834. This period in- cludes the era of the Reform Bill, in the prepara- tion and passing of which Sir James ...

REVIEWS OF BOOKS

... the last moment the Dake of. Wellington igave uip his perilocat attempt, and the humiliated manaroh was forced to reosll the Whigs. William IV received Lcuds Grey and Broughsam under the influence of mortifi- cation, which he did not uffect to disguise; ...

LITERATURE

... the bill for excluding the Duke of ne York fromithe sceiotathtwo great political in sections became known by the names of Whigs and ful Tories. The account given of these titles bya tin Roger North and Burnet is this-- The supporters ;he of the Duke ...

LITERATURE-1

... oratory in the )a House of Commons was chiefly employed in halloo- ed ing on the rabid Jacobitism of his party to worry m whigs, dissenters, bank directors, and all others rywho presumed to question the infallibility of the a, high church faction. The ...

THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... quickly recovered himself and resumed his elabo- rate train of reasoning. Again and again, however, he recurred to old Whig ties and old Whig principles, conceding the best and highest motives to the leaders of the Opposition, while he mercilessly dealt with ...