THE READER

... the Bishop of Exeter as the obscene renegade Phillpotts, and Queen Adelaide as a nasty German frow. Mr. Molesworth is a Whig, and makes no secret of it; but he does his best to write with impartiality, and we think his statements may generally be accepted ...

Published: Saturday 25 November 1871
Newspaper: Graphic
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 2026 | Page: 11 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture 

NEW BOOKS

... depicting typical sceneo of English life and character. Lord Vowleigh is the first characterintroducod, a raan who is neither a Whig nor a Tory, but who votes ' fairly straight with his party, anld who keeps sousthinai like open house at ]lowleigh Towera ...

LORD RUSSELL ON THINGS IN GENERAL*

... thse Try ?? w\iecthem hie wvorld take thle same view of'he tmaterifa LonservativeGoern inemit shotihl ever have to' threaten a Whig majority in ?? ne crelavions. W~ill, however, remain in tile minds of somec ajoghsraesa olpef question. Coming bache to the ...

Published: Saturday 19 March 1870
Newspaper: Graphic
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 1570 | Page: 12 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture 

POETRY

... all our great measures encountered objections From the Liberal party-split into four sections: The Rump of Gladstonians, the Whigs with their fads, Persistent Home Rulers, and resolute Rads. Sure such trouble no Premier ere met with before, For instead ...

MUSIC

... obtained, politically speaking, a more congenial ally in Dr. Brewei. Mr. lebow was 71 years of age; he was a Liberal of the old Whig type, but he had gradually won the respect of his political opponents in addition to the esteem of his political friends. ...

PROFESSOR PRYME

... His life was long and fully occupied. For some years after the Reform Bill he was member for Cambridge, and acted as a steady Whig of the old school. His great pride, however, seems to have been in the part which he took in introducing the study of political ...

LITERARY NOTICES

... regard ;ls the beat test of action, whether in commerce or politics. Lord Detby could rally round bins the best men of the W~hig, Liberal, and Conservative parties ; and, if he were entrusted with the formation of a ministry, it would without quostion ...

LITERATURE

... by their dislike to -Napoleon f and their sywpathy withithe popular movolement in, Germany and ~Spain, were rallied to the Whig standard nod joined~in~conderaning as '-an indefensible principle the proscribing, an-:individua.l to destruction. But ...

JONATHAN HARTOP, ESQ., OR, THE YORKSHIRE NESTOR

... throne of his fathersfail. Yet his hopes of success were not unreasonable. Towards the latter end of Queen Ante's reign, the Whig ministry were completely supplanted by the Tories; the Duke of Marl- borough was slighted, and the Duke of Ormond taken into ...

LITERARY

... The author is evidently no admirer of the Whig policy he portrays, but in the present work he strives, with no mean degree of success, to maintain an impartial attitude. In all proba- bility no friend of the Whigs could have given us so truthful a delineation ...

LITERARY

... Future of the Whig Party. It is natural that this article should have received much attention from the majority of our contemporaries, for it is not only couched in studied terms, but it is manifestly a set panegyric and revindication of thi Whigs. The defeat ...

THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... principles to expediency. It has been a fashion with shallow Liberals ever since the Reform Act to sneer at the Whigs as an obsolete Party. The Whigs, indeed, have never adopted the modern doctrine that legislation is to be dictated by public opinion; and in ...