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Bath Chronicle and Weekly Gazette

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Bath Chronicle and Weekly Gazette

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 ...

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 ...

BATH LITERARY AND PHILOSOPHICAL ASSOCIATION

... to chat by their quiet firesides on the Ministers and their intrigues; to congratulate Anne on being again queen, when the Whigs were finally swept away ; to count the cost of the war, and to speculate on the succession to the throne. Yes, there was short ...

Literary Miscellanea

... it.— Rev. W. B. Mackenzie, M.A., in the Quiver. William 111. at Kensington.—Lord Macaulay has done his best, as a zealous Whig and a party pleader, to make a hero of little, asthmatic, gin-drinkiDg William; but he still exists in our memory as dry, cold ...

THE BISHOPS OF HEREFORD

... and famous Earl of Oxford John Butler, a native of Hamburgh, translated hither from Oxford, who according to Walpole wrote Whig pamphlets when a private clergyman and when Bishop of Oxford preached Tory sermons,'' and whom Lord North certainly promoted ...