Refine Search

Countries

Counties

Lanarkshire, Scotland

Access Type

239
2

Type

241

Public Tags

LITERATURE

... pzes is occupied with matters outside t these tisclie years- They Mere years of in C M&saut laboUI and (ever to ?? English j; Whigs. and Coelbumrn and Jeffiey from Edln- I burgh and dennedysasa membes of Parliament in t odeon, were in a condition of perpetual ...

REMINISCENCES OF MR GEORGE RUSSELL.*

... young Liberal in a Scotch country house, he was taken *with the young man's conversation and pleased to find that he was a Whig. When the party broke up he remarked to his new friend, Well, I am very glad to have made your aeqnaintance, and now, you ...

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 ...

LITERATURE

... or the Blues of the Roman circus against the Greens. In his infancy he had heard so much talk about the villanies of the Whigs, and the dangers of the Church, that hel had become a furious partisan when lie could scarcely speak. I Before he was three ...

MOLESWORTH'S HISTORY OF ENGLAND.*

... Liberalism as a means to an h I end. The end, in those days, was the repeal of the 0 Corn Laws; but, on finding that successive L- Whig Governments fought shy of this matter, e something like the rank-and-file who had a shouted for the Bill, the whole Bill ...

TWO WORKHOUSE STORIES

... condition of these pauper hospitals has before this attracted attention, and if the smallest inventiveness remained. in the Whig Government would long since have been re- medied. A workhouweougght not to be made a pleasant place, but we may at least care ...

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

... contributors to a newspaper published in Edinburgh called the Bcacon, the articles in which, aimed at the leading nen on the 'Whig tide, gave great offence. Some letters and pieces of satirical poetry of a similar kind Iaving appeared in a paper styled the ...