THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... or that for all prposes of knowledge you won't come out of Ireland worse than you went into it. Under the title of A Great Whig Journalist we find a most interesting and admirable article on the life of De Foe. (CornhiUl has come to our hands without ...

LITERATURE

... entitled The Old Monk in the Belfr-y. There is great vigour and solemnity in this tale of human misery. Under the title of A Great Whig Journalist we find a valuable biographical notice of Daniel Defoe. It is in fact a review of Mr. William Lee's work on the ...

Published: Sunday 10 October 1869
Newspaper: The Era
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 557 | Page: 5 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture 

LITERARY NOTICES

... conclu- sion of A Year and a Day, ?? Monk in the Belfry (poetry), ' Juventus 'Mandi, 11 Cornelius O'Dowd, ' A Great Whig Journal- ist, and Charles Reade's Novels. The'fol- lowing remarks of Cornelius O'Dowd On Stu- 'dying the Land Question ...

POETRY

... for A ita .latcr. I Since James Mocccrli iff our trusted chief, p Main now perforce vacate her. I The Liberals true, auld Whigs and new, r flung swithliein' laic ic doubt Pi 'Twcen Prosy Jaiues icud Stuart Mill, ti To keep the Gordont out. Pi The Thaeia ...

Our Library Table

... principal political personages ef the day) unsheathed and fearlessly wielded in explaining political principles, in cutting up Whig and Tory pranks, and especially in discussing the great Irish questions of the day, but we need not proceed further than the ...

Our Library Table

... members, Messrs. M'Laren and Crau- ford, are contending for; and which the leading organ of the Whig party iu Scotland also denounces. We think Blackwood and the Whig organ are right; and trust that changes, which the writer in Maga says, will lower the ...

THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... cusses in a spirit of tolerance, occasionally carried a little too far. In plain short words, all she can say for the great Whig statesman is that he was much cleverer, and not much worse, than his fellows, that he was an affectionate father, and good-humoured ...

THE SMITHFIELD CLUB CATTLE SHOW

... allored o ao to Parlament till be gets rich, he aould. never o a alL. I believe some ofthe old Tories arew ?? ,han some of the Whig nomniaes-i resolution; was iessed'to form' a committee in favo~ur of Mr. Odger. THE[ RglEENATI OP MiYL~OH ^-At tbe neeting ...

LITERATURE

... niece of his own-the daughter of hid sister, who married a Tory gentleman, the only one of the family who had deviated from Whig principles either in love or politics. He orders his coach, and, taking Mrs Vizard along with him, goes to see for himself ...

LOCAL AGRICULTURAL EXHIBITIONS

... of politics, both in 'is speeches and actions. He v son, made no difference between one class and another. Whether l * B B. Whigs or Tories, be was always glad to see them; but he i could not say he was very fond of Radicals. (Laughter i cloth and cheers ...

HOLBORN THEATRE

... componitior; so electric tlat it affected the eneorers, ?? insi-ted on being indulged again, Iietwithstaediuig time was on the whig. Indeed, encores )Nere becoming freqcrnt, as Hlerr Angyalli for sing- ing The Wanderer, and Madame Oswald for the brilliancy ...

Published: Sunday 19 December 1869
Newspaper: The Era
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 3475 | Page: 14 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture 

BOOKS FOR THE YOUNG

... worst of it, if we may be allowed thus to parody the famous speech in which Dr. Johnson desoribed his mode of dealing with tho Whig and Tory members ofPar- liament hen ho Nvas acting as a roporter. Thc ?? hardly aspire to the dignity of history; yet, as a ...