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Examiner, The

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The Examiner

THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... past. 'Tis worth that finds admittance here, not jobbing, At our Elections, neither Moons nor mobbing. No bribing here, no Whig and Tory rout, No challenges,-but those of standing out- No fights, like those with.which yon House is busy, To try the ...

THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... from the loss which the Tories have gained in the recent elections, though on what ground, except from having dished the Whigs, it is difficult for an opponent to understand. From the following paragraph it would appear, however, that the grounds of ...

THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... Maria II., Queen of Portugal. George Canning, Lord Grey, Lord Melbourne, Lord Palmerston, and the principal leaders of the Whigs courted and liked him. The Wel. lesleys, the Duke of Wellington at their head, showed the highest regard for him. He had mixed ...

THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... ingenuous coun- tenance, a pair of arms of unnatural shortness, and scarcely any neck; and, as it would seem-for wigs as well as Whigs were then in the ascendant-hating the word and the thing whichever way it was spelt and whatever it indi- cated, wearing his ...

THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... must needes have some- thing ere I goe. The poor Puritans got no more mercy at the hands of young Mr Manningham than the Whigs received at those of our friend Tom Hearne, upon whose Diary we descanted in our number of the 6th instant. So we are not at ...

THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... shall never lack imperfect accounts of historical events. If one man writes like a Tory, another is certain to write like a Whig; a third will step into the arena and deliver the Radical version in flame; while a fourth will roll out the golden legends ...

THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... of surprise which entsued, Shrewsbury rose and thanked them for their offer. (This nobleman, it appears, was in reality a Whig, but he had succeeded in deceiving Bolingbroke, who fully relied upon his fidelity, and had bestowed upon him the offices of ...

THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... this passage, in which a characteristic letter of Landor's is quoted: But before turning to the letters of that staunchest of whigs, a few further notes may be given from those of Landor and Parr. Here is an acknowledgment from the young poet of the old scholar's ...

THE THEATRICAL AND MUSICAL EXAMINER

... herd together, and never to know the blessing or the worth of domestic esympathy and feeling. But our red-tapeists, whether Whig or Tory, care for none of these things. Mr Gathorne Hardy, as the author of the Act of 1867, sustained Mr Goschen in his design ...

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 ...

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 ...