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Pall Mall Gazette

LORD LIVERPOOL

... coalition was for a long time possible between the Whigs and the Canningites ; and when these reasons had almost disappeared the only medium of communication with the Oppo- sition leaders was no longer in the Whig camp. Lord Grenville had retired from public ...

DRAMATIC CRITICISM AS SHE IS WROTE

... sex or party does the Bouverie' street organ belong ? 'For in moderation it finds all its glory, wlzilst Tories call it Whig, and Whigs call it Tory-lbsen is not a portrayer of real life. There is no class of men who 'send ships to sea knowing them to be ...

Literary Notes, News, and Echoes

... scathing indictment of English misrule by an author from the distressful country than of the picturesque prose of the whilom Whig statesman. Mr. Alfred Deakin, late Chief Secretary and Minister of Water Supply in Victoria, is about to publish, through. ...

LORD MACAULAY.*

... the House of Commons. In i830 Lord Lansdowne returned him to Parliament for the family borough of Calne, and as soon as the Whigs came into power he was made a Commissioner of the Board of Control, and a few months afterwards Secretary. At the general election ...

WHITESIDE'S SKETCHES

... are remarkable. Seven out of his ten portraits are those of well-known politicians, and six out of the seven are or were Whigs, yet we see a careful attempt to do justice to all of them, and only two, namely Lord Grey and Lord Abinger, .seem to us to ...

THE NEW PRAED-McCARTHY NOVEL

... co-operate with any one who will do good to the people, be he Tory, Whig, or Radical-an absurd profession, surely; for although a Tory may do good to the people, as may a Radical, a Whig can never do good to any one except his own and his wife's relations ...

ENGLISH MEN OF LETTERS IN THE EIGHTEENTH CENTURY

... reward for party writing. Congreve got his places because he was an ornament to the Whigs; but he was never a Whig pamphleteer. No doubt Addison used his pen for the Whigs as Swift did for the Tories; and his pro- motion was partly justified by a political ...

OCCASIONAL NOTES

... it formulated, as being de jare, by a Whig like Lord Hartington. The House of Commons, said the noble Lord roundly, has to ;iilg to initiate legislation. The doctrine comes conveniently to the hands of the Whigs and Tories just now, but when the immediate ...

COPY'S GUIDE TO MODERN ENGLISH HISTORY.*

... Charles. And Mr. Cory, whose political principles are more nearly definable as Whig than aiv)ti'ln else, is unfaithful in this heresy to all Whig tradition. So far as tha Whigs are concerned, we have spoken too hardly of the eigthteenth A ide to Modern ...

THE PRESS AND THE ROYAL ACADEMY

... Hlousehold. Words Manchester Courier Weatiliiasser Times Manchester Examiner Truth Manchester Guardian. Wolld PROVrNCIAL Norrhern Whig: Whiteh L11 -1e~iew Aberdeen Daily Free Nottingham journal Cout and Society review ' ress . -. OfYordUITfversity Herald Aodern ...

LORD DALLING'S LIFE OF SIR ROBERT PEEL

... and gained their reputation by adopting Whig principles. What Whig principles? Free Trade? That was the principle of Boling- broke and Pitt, denounced by Somerset and Fox. Roman Catholic Eman- cipation ? The Whigs borrowed it from the Tories. Parliamentary ...

A HISTORY OF ENGLAND IN THE EIGHTEENTH CENTURY

... the death of Anne the Whigs were decisively victorious, and maintained their place without interruption for nearly half a century. Mr. Lecky, therefore, appropriately begins his treat- mnent of this era by a full analysis of the Whig party; and he is remarkably ...