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South West, England

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Bath, Somerset, England

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SOMERSET CHAMBER OF AGRICULTURE

... altogether of politics, it would be their duty to press the matter upon their representatives in Parliament, whether they were Whigs, Radicals or Tories (hear, hear). He hoped, too, that they would have the large sympathy of the people of Bristol as it would ...

Literary Miscellanea

... prisoner is rebellious, and bis sworn subject undutiful and refractory.— a ckeray s Politics.—Sheridan seems to have become Whig, most men become anything, by accident, and by the circumstances of early connection and introduction. bad not the cordial ...

NOTES OF THE WEEK

... spoke and voted for the Resolutions uttered some home truths for the benefit of his own party. He reminded the House that the Whigs had on former occasions handled the question for the purpose of getting into office, and that when they got there the question ...

NOTES OF THE WEEK

... who proceeded to complain of Mr. Disraeli for telling the House so little, and for not having invited some of the moderate Whigs —such as Mr. Bouverie himself for instance —to join him in the formation of broad-bottom administration. He went on to utter ...

NORTH WILTS ELECTION

... Mr. Gladstone all his life. He recollected him when he was Tory and a great Protectionist. He recollected him when he was a Whig-«then Radical, and now he was a Democrat (cheers and uproar). He was the prospective Prime Minister of this country—there was ...

General News

... and thy mother whom thou didst love with all thy great heart and mind, that new song shall never weary to sing.— Northern Whig. Private Life of the Duke of Portland. The Duke of Portland is in bis sixty-ninth year. He is the eldest brother of the late ...

NOTES OF THE WEEK

... Church on the second night of the present debate was indebted for some of its arguments to this remarkable speech of the ex-Whig baronet, who shortly afterwards allied himself to Sir Robert Peel. During the existence of the last Palmerston ministry the ...

MID-SOMERSET ELECTION

... hear). Among the unfortunate people who were tied to Gladstone, and who were groaning at being tied to him were the unhappy Whigs. Just look at what came of being iu'bad company (loud laughter). It was not very long ago that the Wh\gt were all for the Church ...

Miscellaneous

... 12 miles of his property, from which he derives £80,000 a year, has excited considerable local dissatisfaction. The Northern Whig comments upon it an instance of the generosity and liberality of our Irish absentee landlords. The Marquis and his predecessors ...

IRISH CHURCH MISSIONS

... Macaulay, whose natural feelings would lead him to support rather than disparage Rome. a meeting held a few days ago in Dublin, Whig nobleman, Lord Cranmore asked '' If you take Protestantism out of Ireland what is Ireland worth (hear, hear). It would be worth ...

THE POST-REFORMATION PRIVATES

... injudicious, and prostitute divine, for having condemned the Beggar's Opera of the Dean's friend Gay, and perhaps for being a good Whig. Walpole on the other hand calls him a harmless good man inclined to much moderation and of little zsal for the tinsel of ...

BATH TOWN COUNCIL

... nomination upon every principle of doing justice to very large proportion of the inhabitants who were not like himself, old Whigs (a laugh), but Conservatives, who had a very great stake in the wealth of the pity, and certainly ought to have some share ...