BISHOP WILBERFORCE

... Mr. Gorham, and the numerous seces- sions to Rome which followed that of Mr. Newman, had rendered more than ever unpopular. Whigs and Latitudinarians disliked him for his orthodoxy; the, orthodox disliked him for what they called his insincerity; the E ...

MR. MACVEY NAPIER'S CORRESPONDENCE

... Brougham upon his first assumption of the post vacated by Jeffrey; but in I1830 the official airs and peremptoriness of the Whig leader undoubtedly frightened him into a breach not only of editorial propriety, but even of editorial good faith, in his treatment ...

REVIEWS

... Gladstone was last month, by two writers who view the Premier from different aspects-I. by a Tory, Why we follow him; II. by a Whig, Why we disbelieve him. As last month we believed the attacking party suc- ceeded the best, so this month we credit the attack ...

LITERARY SELECTIONS

... lasfau position. Ties KrT-C0T CLrU.-Thle Kit-Cat Club, which con- sisted of the moat distingaised wits and statesmen among the Whigs, woe remarkable for the strictest zeal towards the House of Hanover. They met at a house in .Shire-lane, and took their title ...

BURKE'S PEERAGE AND BARONETAGE.*

... his appointment as Lord Justice of Appeal. If the Tory precedent of Lord Eldon's earldom does not justify his elevation, the Whig precedent of Lord Cottenham and his earldom justifies it with super- fluous abundance. Again, the Marquis of Abergavenny, were ...

UNDER THE SURFACE; OR, FOLLY AND FASHION

... in a hut to going round with the hat is only a small difference. WHCIG TO TORY. A curious ,k-:t:irhzlhot is going on among Whig Plee-1s , sea D 3 I shag:' g Tiailo T';itiee. i 'ie E i .illL' l;, ?? uze l 'em-:I ' arth to eartib :, rd,4ts 1, a .| , d. ...

UNDER THE SURFACE; OR, FOLLY AND FASHION

... Granny got up from his marrow bones, and went and kissed the Queen's littls finger nail, and now all is peace in the home of the Whig chief. MARVELLOUS are the dispensations of providence, Bas erratic its courses as those of a husisgry cat making away with ...

THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... inclined too much to the old Whig view of the Treaty of Utrecht. Most impar- tial judges now hold that it was England's business to get out of that galley by the shortest way possible, and that the war had become simply a Whig job. Nor is it disputed that ...

THE READER

... when all the rest of the team had fairly settled down under the new management-Brougharn, maddened at his ostracism by the Whigs, and bent on making the Review the organ of his private discontent, monopolising subjects, flooding Napier with political articles ...

Published: Saturday 14 June 1879
Newspaper: Graphic
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 3509 | Page: 13 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture 

LITERARY AND ART GOSSIP

... berpublishes two anonymous articles from opposite . sides on Lord Beaconsfield. LA Tory explains Jo O Why we follow him, and a Whig Why we (sB In disbelieve in him. so] Mrs Richard Burton is preparing a series to co a, supply manly reading for boys as prizes ...

ART, SCIENCE, AND LITERATURE

... '~volmune to his Storiesfrom Homer and Virgil. A Pamphblet by Major Osborne in defence of the frinpolicy advocated by- the Whig party during the Frenc War is in the press. The pamphlet has also a I cer-tain bearinig upon theEastern question. It is written ...

LITERATURE

... full of sound, serious Instter in plessast form. 2'JPtle L'ar is remarkable for an elopuent article on the ipueen of the Whigs, which is interestilig from mnny points of view. 'iThe Duclhess of Devon- shire is illdefa tigable, wrote Lord Cornwallis; ...