POLITICS AND THE STAGE

... has to say Damn the City, which was then opposed to the Court, on which a person who hears him adds All the Whigs, Charles, all the Whigs. Lord Shaftesbury is caricatured in Sir Timothy Treat-all, a seditious old knight who entertains; commonwealthmen ...

Published: Sunday 23 June 1878
Newspaper: The Era
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 1621 | Page: 6 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture 

LORD MELBOURNE

... one of the Whigs, as Palmerston was one of the Tories, who on the break up of Lord Liverpool's Admi- nistration acquired the designation of Canningites. The Tories who -adhered to Canning on the defection of Wellington and Peel, and the Whigs who came over ...

ENGLISH PARTY LEADERS.*

... change the officers e of his household. The real reason was that the Whig leaders did not receive a direct and unlimited authority for forming a Ministry. They ( stood out for the old Whig doctrine that it was for the party and not for V the Sovereign to ...

LONDON IN THE JACOBITE TIMES.*

... held; and the injudicious manifesto of the Pre- tender, which many of his adherents sought to disavow as an invention of the Whigs, was followed by a crowd of libellous pamphlets, the hawkers of which, with the ap- proval of the new Secrefary of State, Lord ...

LORD MELBOURNE

... the two principal diffi- culties in the formation of a Government were Lord Brougham and Lord Palmnerston. The whole body of Whig leaders, it seems, were sick of l.crd Brougham; and it was found impossible to include him in the new Administration. But who ...

LORD MELBOURNE.*

... in 1S35 the two principal diffi- , An the formation of a Government were Lord Brougham and Lord i. Tn on. The whole body of Whig leaders, it seems, were sick of i(ia 1;ioughamn; and it was found impossible to include him in the rnw \cDnlinistration. But ...

Magazines

... the policy of carping and cavilling, depreciation of English successes, and prophecies of English failures, pursued by the Whig Opposition under Lords Grey and Holland, and Tierney, Romilly, and Brougham, throughout the Peninsular War. The sketch, we ...

Published: Saturday 10 August 1878
Newspaper: Graphic
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 1607 | Page: 20 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture 

Art and Literature

... nt to the audacious mendacity of Atterbury, and endeavour to join in the enthusiasm which Cibber's NKonjuror evokes from Whig patriotism. While the author followsthe misfortunes of the Stuarts to the end and even enters into an elaborate examination ...

Poetry

... have tee for a bride, Rldo over yonder plain, sod bring Your flask, full froin the Musgang spring; Fly, fast a. wveterni v ?? whig, O'er the Llano Estacad I Fe heard, and bowed without a word, It Is gallant steed he lightly spurred; lie turned his face ...

A HISTORY OF ENGLAND IN THE EIGHTEENTH CENTURY

... the death of Anne the Whigs were decisively victorious, and maintained their place without interruption for nearly half a century. Mr. Lecky, therefore, appropriately begins his treat- mnent of this era by a full analysis of the Whig party; and he is remarkably ...

BAND OF HOPE CONCERT

... safegttard to the young which the Band of Hope movemleit was. The newspapers vere now engaged in showing whai had spent the most, Whigs or Torie8, bitt they oughtto let the temperance people show a few figares, and they would soon shame both sides. What were ...

A HISTORY OF ENGLAND IN THE EIGHTEENTH CENTURY.*

... the death of Anne the Whigs were decisively Oictorious, and maintained their place without interruption for nearly half a century. Mr. Lecky, therefore, appropriately begins his treat- inent of this era by a full analysis of the Whig party; and he is icniaikably ...