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England

Place

Bath, Somerset, England

Access Type

39

Type

39

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BATH YOUNG MEN'S CHRISTIAN ASSOCIATION

... and soon found his level alongside the first debaters the house. Money now began to flow into the League, and the advanced Whigs began to give their adhesion, Mr. Villicrs's annual motion getting larger support. At last his steady perseveiaice gained the ...

NOTES OF THE WEEK

... sudden disappearance of the disease before the approach of winter. As the Conservative maxim is to let well alone, so that the Whig Liberals appears to be to let ill alone. They will tamper with the Parliamentary suffrage, in which there is no urgent necessity ...

NOTES OF THE WEEK

... But a far more practical step has been taken this week Earl Grosvenor, the eldest son the Marquis Westminster who is surely a Whig, if there ever were one. Our readers will perhaps remember that in his address to the electors of Chester last summer the Earl ...

Literary Miscellanea

... deserves to be, and the government with it. For Lord Grosvenor represents a strong body of moderate men, who, though they be Whigs, are Whigs of the old school, and prefer their country and its great institutions to any party triumph. But granting it to reach ...

Miscellaneous

... who are influential will not be slow to use their influence on behalf of William Carleton, a North of Ireland man.— Northern Whig. The late Lord Edward St. Maur.—The London correspondent of the Manchester Guardian says :—The Duke of Somerset has been suddenly ...

THE CHANGE OF MINISTRY

... will be preferred to the other office. Some of the leading Adullamites, or as the Times calls them, the more Conservative Whigs, will no doubt take office in the new administration. This being premised, it is easy to see that Mr. Lowe's great administrative ...

Literary miscellanea

... that way, will shrink from it. Lord Melbourne took the latter mode. Yet, though he thought with the Tories and acted with the Whigs, I always vindicated him from the charge of inconsistency. A man is not a traitor for surrendering town to the enemy when untenable ...

NOTES OF THE WEEK

... the hands of Sir R. Knightley, political opponent, is threatened with yet further harm by Captain Hayter, the son of the old Whig whipper-in, who, propounding the sentiments of his father, declares the Redistribution bill is no reform at all and has ac ...

THE PAST YEAR

... allies, Mr. Bright and the extreme Radicals, with the most determined hostility, and it was not till Lord Grosvenor, a moderate Whig, ahd a few other like minded supporters of the Government, insisted upon having before them the Government plan of redistribution ...

NOTES OF THE WEEK

... the death of Mr. Dundas. Ministerial candidates for each seat have already presented themselves, and as the influence of a Whig peer predominates both in the one and the other place, it maybe presumed their nominees will be elected without opposition ...

NOTES OF THE WEEK

... have been exhausted in the elevation of Mr. Gbschen to the Cabinet. The new Cabinet minister, therefore, has been sought among Whig patricians, and a more genuine and, on the whole perhaps, a better specimen of the class could not have been found. Lord Hartington ...

General News

... Rivers in Portinahsquare was sold thi3 week to the Duke of Leeds for £10,800, the fixtures to be taken at valuation. The old Whig Globe, it is said, is about to change hands. It has been purchased by Mr. Wescomb, the proprietor of the Exeter and Plymouth ...