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LITERATURE

... solicitous than the the Whigs for the interests of trade and commerce. To got secure the power of the Church the Occasional Conformity goe Act ws huried troughboth ouses to cusht e P5 Act washurrie throuh ?? to crsh thestel W~higs Marlborough was accused ...

LITERARY NOTICES

... The paper, however, on the Scottish Jacobites and their poetry contains some highly-absurd state- ments, such as that the Whigs in the reigns of the first and second Georges were paid for their poems by the Government, while we could well have spared ...

THE LITERARY LIFE OF THE MODERN ATHENS

... and Jeifrey, of Brougham and Hornet-, of Christopher North and the Ettrick Shepherd ; the age when Tory Blachtc'ood and Whig Review had their birth. The great lights died out one by one others, but none so brilliant, have shone in their places. They ...

THOUGHT-READING

... Ministerialists, eucompromising Radicals from below the gangway, )upporters of the Opposition, Parnellites, old-fashioned Whigs, members of the Fourth Party, and Mr. Ashmead- Bartlett, were mixed up together in the narrow space to orm one of the most ...

THE JULY MAGAZINES

... instances of acuteness, tact, and judgment displayed by the . Queen, and of the impartiality of the support she gives her Ministers-Whig or Tory. ''Among the Teutons is a defence of German manners and uastoms from the charge of coarseness and want of refinement ...

Magazines

... effective article else is Revolution and Reform, by Mr. H. M. Hyndman, who unequivocally states his entire disagreement with Whig, Tory, Liberal, and Conservative, with Mr. Chamberlain and Lord Salisbury, and is all for the achievement of socialistic ends ...

G.O.L

... d- 1 Bestial, a meagre intellect, unfit at, I To be the tenants of man's noble form, 26 , Albeit stain'd and t edolont of Whig. d- 'Tis, therefore, sober and goo( men are sad So- IFor England's glory, saying it is pals and sickly 1 rd, Under the blight ...

DOROTHY FORSTER

... and country gentlemen. Dinner despatched, he would presently walk to White's Coffee H ouse, in St. James's Street, where no Whig dare so much as show his face. Here would he take a dish of coffee or chocolate, with a pipe of tobacco, and, perhaps, if the ...

DOROTHY FORSTER

... have in my Lord a pillar of strength. He will be to the loyal gentlemen of the North as much as the Duketof Argyll to the Whigs of Scotland. I have it on the best authority that, although brought up in France, he is an Englishman ; though a Catholic, ...

Published: Saturday 16 February 1884
Newspaper: Graphic
County: London, England
Type: | Words: 6779 | Page: 23 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture 

LITERATURE

... from the noble lord's speech at hllacpulol in January lest:- The well- heave proverb, I Vex popubi, vax Del,' is to the Whigs as sounding brass and tinkling cymobals, f or they have always existed by corrupting and, deceiving the people. To the Radicals ...

BOLINGBROKE

... has written a good book. That he discusses BIolilnabrokc's character and conduct from the point of view of sympathy with the Whig, not the Tory, party, is certainly not against himl, for hostile criticism, ii the hostility be not unfair (and Mr. Harrop ...

ART NOTES

... Academy at allh The man in Cavendish- square, as Reynolds styled him, and who painted Tory ladies as Sir Joshua painted Whig ladies, declined the honour of member- ship of the R.A. About this time Romney, who had left his wife and family to fare scantily ...