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Examiner, The

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England

Place

London, London, England

Access Type

391
1

Type

392

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The Examiner

THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... content with knowing Barrow and South, she appears to be always tossing them in other people's faces. She cannot abide the Whigs because they are not religious. Though she lets Mr Wynville fall in love with her, and tolerates his pre- sumption, she tells ...

THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... atll lower houses, aisd by the two great parties coismmossly distitiguislied as Tory and Whig, Conservative and Liberal-tlse Torics representisig the Norman, thie Whigs the Saxois element or principle-thu former loving the country, dwelling apart, cultivating ...

THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... thev could doubtless be in. creased to 200 with advantage to the colony, and 'with additional security for the maintenance of Whig principles in the colonial administration; did such a body of electors as they would thus form would, I conceive, be setffiz ...

THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... excellent practical illustrations and en- forcement of the principles of free trade, in the Silk debate of 1829. The great body of Whigs divided with him the next year in his motion for a general revision of taxation, and on the formation of Lord Grey's ministry ...

LITERATURE

... The time has not come to undo the lessons of our history and call black white, that our old Radicals may be de- mbied, and Whigs and Tories immortalised. The times of which Mr. Lovett, now seventy-six years ofae, writes, were very dark times for poor men ...

THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... without deli. beration. Fox caught at this; and it is proof of the estimation in which Scott's talents were held, that sundry Whig compliments at once solicited the young lawyer. But he had already chosen his side, and in a few nights came out with what ...

THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... dignities of the church, for helping to rivet the fetters of' Catholic Anld Protestant Dis senters, and no more chance of a Whig adminiatra- e The Rev. Sydney Smith, whose writings, chiefly from stie SE ...

LITERARY

... reticent, and does not prove himself least cunning and least truthful in showing how nearly the distinction between Whig and Tory is dead. Whig and Tory: The Two Root-Ideas, is the title of an article in the Contemporary, by Mr Montague Cookson. In the same ...

THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... been torn to shreds, feudal traditions con- tinued to give strength to the principles and purposes of an oligarchy. The Old Whigs were not exactly what Mr Morley calls them, a select horde of Peers wrangling for places and for the public money, devoted ...

THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... various steps which ended in the Act of Union. Finally, there are the contests for power which produced the resignation of the Whig Ministers and the ascendancy of the Tories; while, as an appendix to the graver questions of war and peace, to victories in ...

LITERARY

... judgment seat. He had stored his mind with a pro- digious mass of varied facts, and all the narrow but precise wisdom of the Whigs lay at his command. He was also a born debater. And finally, he had the perfect command of a style which, if viciously artificial ...

THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... Travels in the United States) became editor. True to his principles, he gave in his rapacity every support in his power to the Whig or Liberal party. He was appointed by Lord Melbourneoto the situation of Factory Inspector, which he held till his death at ...