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Place

Glasgow, Lanarkshire, Scotland

Access Type

54

Type

54

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LITERATURE

... to expect a pro- W'duction as thoroughly Tory as Macaulay's| he | account of the monarch's reign is uncom- In- promisingly Whig. In this respect, how- Irs ever, Mr Traili's work presents a very: elstriking contrast to that of the der writer, 2o1an is ...

FLOWER SHOWS

... tho display. The centre roonl was set apart fur the pot plants; the fruit, &c,. were laid out in the north wing, the south whig being occtleid by a spltedid array of cut flowers; the vegetables were displayed in the open square in front of the schooL ...

LIFE OF SIR RICHARD

... of the rake and a little of the ht swindler. Nor is this all Sir Richard Ir has to answer for at the hands of Xn the great Whig historian. When whispering ae tongueshad poisoned truth and all but brokeup ey the life-long friendship between Addison ...

MALTHUS AND HIS WORK

... wvere co.,dstiound 'c by hise ?? population. in politics, instead d of heing a reactionrary, -Malthus waus Ianl ad-; yanced Whig. He thought the Tory arguments -aantthe education of the lower classes 1not aonly illiber-al; but to the last degs'ee feeble ...

THE MAGAZINES

... of anger, of the Whigs who have disowned Mr Gladstone's Irish policy. but who have developed no counter- acting policy. We are tforced to admit that many of the reproaches to which Maga gives utterance are just, but then if the Whigs are doing nothing ...

LITERATURE

... the unhappy Dean suffered more from his uneven temper and uncontrolled hate than could be ex- cited by the petty favour of Whigs, or deep disap- pointment of Tories. His early experience in life with Temple couldtendin novwa to soothe a naturally irritable ...

CATTLE SHOWS

... e4dele-146 Allai Mack;kY. kszrlsheal; 2.1, Rot. Itotertos, ]Anwond 5(5. Janies Wallace, LFsilaY. P'ony, not kexedingj I - hands WhIg -lot, A-. R. ?ergnuson, Nelstoo; 2I, )D. MfiCoi, PaalSey Road, Glasgow; 3d, H. L. HLarey of Castle Sempile. Best turn ont of ...

LITERATURE

... about his work :- Our ancestors demanded frequent Parliaments as a right. The House of Lords declared for them, Whigs gave us them; and when Whigs took them away again, Tories struggled for their continuance. !Names known to us now us these of greati I Ministers ...

GLASGOW INTERNATIONAL EXHIBITION

... be for- [gotten, and if the career of the Laird of Leg, of IRedgeuntlet, is illustrated by any historical I objects, the Whigs of Gallowvay, whom he .harried, and the Covenanters seill have their i tales told by relics as speaking. The secondI special ...

LITERATURE

... and Coleridge- w be d3l', -or politiclast, ant', 'rritiag ha ?? ?? Biill tunaes, the career i I C to be used as a peg o w; on Whig statesme ?? ?? About the hi~story of C 1 v3.ry Bowles never seemed i Ki3 rt ^or at least-did not > Ejrjt hl ?? alltllgiit professes ...

THE LAIRD OF SKENE:

... Parliament for his native 'sounty. In this capacity his strong attachment to Mr . Fox's Ministry, and his steady adher. sonce to Whig principles, found a vent. Hei was emphatically a ' man to take a lead; IDat te violence of his political feelig e wore, apt ...

LITERATURE

... orders save in the latter Church. But for this scruple he might have been regarded aR I a a modern example of a ' Wesaland Whig. But I though he broke all early ties he never seems to have lost touch of his early friends,; and his preachings in the streets ...