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AMUSEMENTS IN WIGAN

... 1B10luea Iad ill stronlg teriis, anid Viows rosevege. A 'er 'Street of Ilagilai iliscovers librahiin seadeil onl a bo-iri tiI 5 whig. surrtouriiedl iii- market girls, rid, lila arii - Is. S ir Arrime appear on the sri ne. The fun1101 iogills10, ter a ?? it ...

Published: Saturday 06 January 1894
Newspaper: The Era
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 1710 | Page: 8 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture 

REVIEWS

... though1 often stormy, were always starry. In 1789 lhe became a member of the Irish Bar, and wrote a pamphlet in favour of the Whigs. I-Ic had been auditor of the 1 His- torical Society of Trinity College, Dublin-similar to that known as The Union' at ...

REVIEWS

... odotir. of decayi Breathe ironi the inyrtitd 1miatin ior Ghre(r-ek met Greek. eV In another style wve heave the homnage of' a Whig Patriot to ?? adamantine Pitt ?? tli Me1n lookedl and fell thev could not be dis:mayedl, of So'f firin lie stood. I fi.tclrion ...

REVIEWS

... part of George IIl.'s reign, through all that of George IW. and of William IV. the gay, facile pen carries us. .Tories and Whigs, princes and fine ladies, statesmen, poets, and novelists-Mr. Jekyll knows, lives -with, and discourses of them all. Such ...

Some April Magazines

... dignity of the Empire as any Tory or Jingo. The final breach seems to have occurred when Lord Spencer, Mr. Gladstone's favourite Whig Peer, insisted that the Navy must be reinforced, cost what it might. Lord Rosebery, of course, at the Foreign Office, led the ...

Published: Saturday 31 March 1894
Newspaper: Graphic
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 2154 | Page: 17 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture 

SOME POETRY OF THE DAY

... hid front the umoon . She wrtung her clawis, poor thing, of But seat ar too proud to spetik, y( So tuck'd her head uscder her whig, 0 Aisd preteuded to be aslesep ! The highest mierit of the volume is that children Ln will react it vwithout any sonse of ...

REVIEWS

... their life-bias. Once the great dyke had been broken through, the varied stream of ?? flowed freely, and bore the recipients of Whig favour into all kinds of useful and agreeable offices. One of the Hill brothers, Rowland, became the Post Office reformer; ...

THE REFORM CLUB LIBRARY

... too exclusively Whig ;tIne, Westmtinster was too inmcoinrpronuiin~ingly Rnndic'al. where-as thne Ite- form wsyn designed to ariibrd alt varieties oi Iteormuers in tite United K(inngdenn a wehoucne as wvell as at home, whlere tine Old Whig, the mode- rate ...

A TALE OF THE COVENANTERS.*

... followers were ''ready to bill luau and tint. kiss maid in tlte Ifitig's name, as was rare sport tlte in the country of (Ice Whigs.'tm hut (isle Ait hour afterut-artle, clattering is irolt soul bravery, nec Urlitretl of liarthtantl teettect his linde '11111 ...

BOOKS AND MAGAZINES

... passenger, with which this series was inaugurated. In tite tine of Lauderdale and tise barrying of the Whigs, Sir Uchtred, himself a rene- gade Whig, rode up to the navs of a little comntry church to arrest its non-conforming minister, who was preaching ...

A MAD KING

... legislating I'll show the people I've th' intent, By their condition elevating, Their stock of happiness to augment, And if both Whig and Tory take Fright at such measures, I'll a. Red The Premier of the country make, Oh! the King is stark, staring mad I ...

Some October Magazines

... the man who divides the Radicals least, who placates every interest, and dexterously impresses all sections, teetotalers, Whigs, democrats, and the rest of the bunch with the idea that he is with them in his heart of hearts. In fact, he has pla- cated ...

Published: Saturday 06 October 1894
Newspaper: Graphic
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 2111 | Page: 16 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture