DISRAELI'S PARTY

... party- (And they were not slow to learn), There never yet was principle But irsido out 'twoald turn: Tilat what Ia a lie in Whig months, In Tory ouiths is true; And household suffrage always Was a genuine Tory viow. Disraeli led his party, Two seovoral ...

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 

OUR LITERARY REVIEW

... of his researches and the brilliance of his descriptions-local and personal-will ever be admired, the great Whig historian was too much of a Whig, too much of a partisan, too fond of effect, too favourable to friends, too harsh to enemies, too narrow ...

DISRAELI'S PARTY

... party- (And they were not slow to lears), There never yet wa'8s principle But inside out 'twould turn; That what's a lie iCC Whig mouthe In Tory mouths is true ; And Household Suifrage always Was a genuine Tory view. Disraeli led his party Two several tirr~aa ...

NEW BOOKS AND NEW EDITIONS

... of the time, chief of chiefs and hero of heroes, Nawab Governor-General Lord Minto, Bahddur. So did the image of a Scotch Whig peer reflect itself in the mind of a Calcutta moulvie in i8io. The book is interesting as a specimen of Mohammedan benevolent ...

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 ...

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 ...

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 ...

Fine Arts

... especially that in which she says she will not be Heckter'd (sic), by the Whigs; and another ic which she expresses c hope that she may not fall into the hands of either party, W~hig or Tory, as iu that case she would regard herself aes not a Queen, but ...

RECENT POLITICAL HISTORY

... nt can teach. The Refosm Bill of 8g6o, known to be no favourite with the Premier himself, was snubbed by the aristocratic Whigs, and allowed by Lord Palmerston to be so nearly defeated that Lord Russell was compelled to let it fall. No attempt to introduce ...

LIVES OF LORD LYNDHURST AND LORD BROUGHAM

... Lyndhurst have so much the less reason to complain that Lord Campbell is impartially lavish of criticism and condemnation. Of the Whig party, perhaps Lords Grey and Lansdowne escape as easily as any, but Lords Melbourne and Althorpe have little reason to co ...

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 ...