LITERATURE

... with considerable ability and nl admirable temper. The author traces the beginning of P that alienation to the refusal of the Whigs under Lord V John Rueoell through Lord Clarendon in 1817 to apply ' themselves to the redress of Irish grievances, and g attributes ...

Literary Notices

... he does not see any probability of an immediate accession of the Conservatives to power; and he thinks it better that the Whig-Liboral party should be permitted to die out of itself. An A hedge dying out at bottom, and getting thinner and thinner every ...

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 ...

LITERATURE

... the idea is as old as the stucy of The Two Drounios. Polities at Hlome and Abread is milder in tone than the onslaughts on Whig policy usually found in Blacckwocd. PRNTL'Y-r Cardinael Pole is continued, and grows in Interest as it progresses. c The ...

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 ...

DRUMBO AND DRUMBEG FARMING SOCIETY

... different opinions held by each Church, yet the common principles of Christianity. Tey all assembled there, not because they were Whigs or Tories, but because they were honest Irishmen. (Applause.) He held, therefore. though their meet- ings, strictly speaking ...

OUR CARPET BAG

... canvassing Cambridge Univer- sity, and asked Muegrave, afterwards Archbishop of York, for his vote, the reply was, I am a Whig still, sir ! Munagrave's dog vvas couchant under the chair on which the candidate was sitting, and he was advised to take ...

Published: Sunday 15 November 1863
Newspaper: The Era
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 1578 | Page: 6 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture 

THEATRE ROYAL

... tender regard; Mr. Bryden, equally doubt- less, feels it his interest to be faithfal and useful to his party. The temporising Whig is the most despicable and unreliable of mortals, and where the f interests of the most flourishina community in Ire- land ...

DUBLIN EXHIBITION PALACE AND WINTER GARDEN

... fashion was pO- ?? the lotaofDecemiber, ih'en'ko-f oill be 4QAe. all over- again, and parlitnerpt will, he still further ?? Whig:Loiion ?? k report awae eurreat in Warsaw that Ganerat de Verg-wasGto ee' relieved from ha' command. He hae' tbindoned' all ...

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 ...

LITERATURE

... Admiral to resist any bias fronm either of these co-operating forces, and to serve England, whose Government had now become Whig, and was not responsible for his command. The position was trying, but the Commander was equal to the occasion. There is a ...

Published: Sunday 03 May 1863
Newspaper: The Era
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 2148 | Page: 6 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture 

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 ...