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... which the Political Unions le had forced upon them; this we know frora personal ex- ti perience. In the elections of 1834 the 'whigs and radi- ec cals lost about 100 seats, and their continued ascen- h dancy was only preserved by the Lichfield-house corm- ...

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

... 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

... Parliament by help of a tem- porary vacancy made for him in a snug Welsh family borough. There soon followed the defeat of the Whigs, who had brought in a free trade Budget. Mr F. Baring's proposal for a reduction of the sugar duties having been rejected, ...

PROVINCIAL THEATRICALS

... place in the Court-house, Wakeifiold, odi Monday last, before a pretty numerous atttendauce of froehollers. Major Fawkes, the Whig candidate for the office, haviag retired from the contest at the end of last week, no oppositicz was offered to the return ...

Published: Sunday 10 May 1863
Newspaper: The Era
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 11793 | Page: 12 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture