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Mr. G. V. Brooke at Belfast

... will axppear as vihyock; aed on Wednesday night for tho benefit of the General Hiospital, as Sir Gibes (From Thos Northernr Whig, Jan. 26th.) Taxuraav BoYAL.-Yestrrday evening, eMr.G V. Brooke re.appenrod at this Theatre, and reeived a perfect ?? irom ...

Published: Sunday 31 January 1864
Newspaper: The Era
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 2012 | Page: 11 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture 

THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... though there was no moon. Both parties turned it on their enelnies. The Whigs said it was God's judgment on the horrid rebellion, and the Tories said that it came for the Whigs taking off the two Lords that - were executed. I could hardly make ray chairmen ...

THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... the Duke of Buckingham's 'Court and Cabinets of George the Third and George the Fourth,' of Lord Holland's ' Memoirs of the Whig Party,' of the ' Cornwallis Correspondence,' and of the 'Corre- spondence, Despatches and other Papers of Viscount Castlereagh ...

FINE ARTS

... name in literature and a place in I society, and lived an object of tender regard and affection- c ate esteem among all his ?? Whig. WORI8NG M's CLUB.-On Thursday evening t I a preliminary meeting was held in the school room, Harvey- I street, Moxton, to ...

LITERATURE

... a nt u rieri 'thbber *id'jobb~ri that did no~t ben~ef thepoo, ad h s ideas oE the currny *erequite puerile. Hle hated the Whigs and he did ?? Tor iesh politics were his own. Some of his views went o the extremneof revolutionary radicaliam, others were ...

THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... that some are very wise, And some are very funny, And some grow rich by telling lies, And some by telling money. I think the Whigs are wicked knaves, And very like the Tories, Who doubt that Britain rules theawaves, And ask the price of glories; I think ...

THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... afterwards, on occa- sion of Sterne's ordination and his preferment to Sutton Vicarage in 1738, it is said that the sound Whig arch- deacon had obtained it for his nephew. Jaques Sterne was not, to be sure, an archdeacon till eight years later, but ...

THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... There was a feeling amongst a few that a penny weekly sheet would be below the dignity of the Society. One gentleman of the old Whig school, who had not. originally belonged to the Committee, said again and again, It is very awkward. Lord Brougham, however ...

REVIEWS OF BOOKS

... more pregnant by the weight of the name of the Roman Catso- lie Bishop of Killaloe, Dr. Kennedy, who was a highly infuential Whig. The priests were loud in their praise of the Protestant inspector. Deb, Mr. B-d, said the archbishop, twisting about th ...

LITERATURE

... humour. It is 3bard to meet Corneliusl O'Dfowd's delightfnl banter with a severe countenance; wemust take h sayings about Whigs and Liberal, about reform aud progress, as we do his conments upon foreign land andpeople, as the outpouring of a full and ...

LITERATURE

... against the Utilitarians, spoke never- theless on fixed principles as a Whig, that in to say, as a professor of High-statesmanship, and naturally and consistently grew into the Whig of 1832, the pleader for a cause which Somers and Halifax would have espoused; ...

THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... used and well enjoyed. Mr O'Dowd writes on his title-page,- I care not a fig For Tory or Whig, But sit in a bowl and kick round me. But he likes hitting a Whig better than he likes hitting a Tory, and he has his individualities of opinion that save him ...