REVIEWS

... his knowledge of Ulster and that once potent political factor, the northern Whig, and we sympathize with him in his desertion by the Liberal statesman whom he and the northern Whig worshipped not wisely but too well; but we had been better pleased ifl he ...

LITERARY NOTES

... Tweuty-eight Years' Experience as an Irish Mditur, by Mr T'lrlmas Maclaknight, the well-knowni editor of the Beltast *' Nortlhern Whig, and author 't Tue History of the Life and Times of Edmund Burke and other wvorks. Mir ackukaiabs personal experiences make ...

The Most Gorgeons Lady

... months for a thousand jbounds a week. No, not even with hoh privilege of haniging a Tory on evejv-lamp-arm to the right, and a Whig on every one to the left the whole extent-of 0.sccdilh'. After this anybody, even without other kno~ledge of Landor, is quite ...

Published: Saturday 25 July 1896
Newspaper: Graphic
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 1078 | Page: 17 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture 

A RAKE'S PROGRESS.*

... The briiiant, ervatie Philip Dule of Wharton, ! who ssquarndered the enormous fortune left by his fatler, the distinguished Whig statesman of the davs Coi Willijiun 11. and Queen Anne, and, after scandalising Earope wvith his extrsordinary ecapdes, died ...

REVIEWS

... these times of ours. Who would say that these lines were altogether out of date ?- Rerove me from this Sand of slaves Where Whig and Tory fiercely fight, Where all are fools and all are knaves; Who's in the wrong, s'ho in the right; where every knave and ...

AN ARCTIC HERO.*

... Scotlhnd for any vestiges of Sheri- dan's correspondence which may have boen gut, hidden away amnig the archives of the great ite. Whig honses, has led t'o the discovery of many new and interesting facts. Among such ves- it , tiges are the letter-s which passed ...

REVIEWS

... good for him ; he forgot his appointments and was ?? in small matters ; he wasted his opportunities and seoffed at the old Whig ring: in other words, a disorderly wit with more than a touch o-f H-arold Skinipole in his nature. Mr. Fraser Rae is natu.raily ...

LITERARY ARRIVALS

... acquaintane wzith ?? O'Connel~l ansd other leaders!' of 'the Repeal agitation, which Irishmen of to-dayI think was dished by the Whigs in the middle of the, reign. Mr. Leek-y, in scare interacting reminiscences contributed to the volumne, eta-tee that he knew ...

THE ANGLOSCOTTISH UNION.*

... bour. Onicenmore, in this interrsatiomsal dispute, re- 1 cr );igien decided thle issue ; and Scoitch and Rug-- b: a lisle W~higs, alarmecd at J~amnes I1.'s Rotmtidst .poiy, un~ited in sutpport of the Itevoltition anid -eWilliemn thle Dutchmlan, What ihe ...

THE POLITICAL CREED OF ROBERT BURNS

... Robert Dundas, the Lerd-Advocate of the sedition trials. He lived to be heartily ashamed of this. The dishonour to his great Whig friend Erskine, Burns treated with withering sarcasm. Talents to deserve a place are qualifications - saucy. He concludes ...

LITERATURE

... Ferrand Martinez and the Massacres of 1391, and BMr Clharles H. Laevermora con- tributes a very iutoesting article on The Whig.s of Colonial New York. Reviews are given of malny recent historical Nsorks, both American and European, and there is a ...

MAGAZINES AND REVIEWS

... land. M~r. Wmn. Morris admits that there is, strictly speaking, no Siocislisa partyr in. England, a~lthough Socialism, with Whig-Liberalism, sustai~ned a reverse at the last general electionx. A&t The samne time, he holds there is no progress possilble ...