JUDGMENT of the COURT-MARTIAL

... to change his character, in order to prove his attachment to the august dinaisty which i. Providence has restored to us. 0 whig iio ?? o0 to Nap)leon, who ernelly persecuted him, he, does not even aspire to be known to those who dispenic the Ld fa-vours ...

LAW INTELLIGENCE

... acc-l4arce a nd indriu n~ett, aiu1 cl ±I5;1..ouon- pa) OstiiS J Mr, Toeprit-, on tleepart of tbe defendantl,.8chmitted t11 , ,I whig Faet as a ileftgice, to the i:dliOI1 -,Previous to the OfrFecees whicb Mr. J.. D, May had unfortwsnatey expiatel with bils ...

LITERARY NOTICES

... the almost los; character of the Jacobites: it advances bevond Mtr. Burke's doctrine in his Appleal from the new to the old Whig- : in one word, it has accomplilied Hunae's euihaqnasy of tihe British constitution- for, if Britonscos- sqfnt to he a guard ...

LENT ASSIZES

... raised his anxious head. it Thy speech, 0 SINCLAIRS! on no point was fixed! Sad beacon on thy wandering way; re hi Now with Whig lore, and now with Tory mixed, di On SSuioluvss, now it called, now trembling called on GREv. hi With eyes upraised, as one ...

POLICE

... at thr same time di no inconsiderable instructionl. .The author of IVeter'se Letteisr is a '.rory,; d ~ Ii~~sigie the Whigs--butbhis: lu't'spolitictll creed, aisd -his -attackslon'the. =-etlo~rii Jdx'ertsrles, a re -W'fen. writh snot a lithle-both- ...

PROVINCIAL INTELLIGENCE

... condi:t At a certain class of geudlenett wi.ot lie perceived to he obait, bt Aho titg.hit to have beeni there. lie nwaiit tile Whigs. (flear.) Now, they were tot met there to uliselss a party questio., or tle rmerits of particttlar systerns of reform, but ...

LAW INTELLIGENCE

... s. from a due attachment to the pd??lpl?i of Mr. Foa, brought up *e his son. fir the esme principles1 viz. chase of the Old Whig School. Cr Maythe spirit of the sire animate the son Mi'. Carlile then repeated one of Moore's Sacred Songswliich he contended ...

PROVINCIAL INTELLIGENCE

... dwelt on the conduct of Ministers, their profligate expenditure, their late ill- stlits to thle snFfering people, &c. If the Whigs came into power, they most be steady to their principles and profess~ins; they must restore the people to their rights and ...

COURT OF KING's BENCH, Nov. 15

... equality. .8trong 2tefstres must be resorted to, and that speedily, or we sball have a general itlsi'recti.iu in the country. Whig, ann Tories in that quarter are all agreed in this, and the Duke ?? has changed his tone wvonderfully since his famous letter ...

THE MERCURY

... developmerit of this conspiracy, the Ministerial Prgs$ has groaned beneath thde load of in- vectives poured out against the Whigs. They are ac- cused as the real, though indirect cause of the atrocioui plot to which we have so often referred, because, for- ...

YORK ASSIZES

... fled, witty, and frequently pathetic oration, which occupied four hours and forty ninutes in -the delivery. Every person, Whig or Tory, who heard it, described 1 it as the most impressive effort they ever witnessed-fill of point-severe attacks upon Scarlett ...

[ill]

... by Mr Rome and one or two outer witnesses, antd were perfectly dleci- sive of flhe case, even without the reasoning of NMr Whig- ham, who appeared for the prosecutor, and who detailed the facts iii a very distinct and satisfactory manner. Mr George Graham ...