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Examiner, The

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London, London, England

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391
1

Type

392

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The Examiner

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

... and thus it occurs with Governments: we care not whether they be Whig or Tory, for both are alike subject to, and both must alike bend to, the varying course of human events. Tfhe Whigs proclaimed the general principle of non-intervention in the affairs ...

THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... this English History was likely to flraw on him the re. sentment of some of the most zealous and least considerate of the Whigs. i God knows, I had no thought for or against liberty in my head; my whole aim being to make up a book ota decent size, and ...

THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... unequalled for its barefaced injostice by anything that the most atrocious page of history can record, also inform lier that Whigs arc naughty people, who, for political reasons,- give livings - to men as bad and as Evangelical as themselves. Upon ,which ...

THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... Curacy a very omi- notis name for your preferment)-calling yourself a Whig, contemned and vie lified by your neighbours;-or kick Reform, and Liberality, and all that, to the first Whig on record-(vide Dr Johnson's opinion of the devil)-and lie in clover ...

THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... THE LITERARY EXAMINER. The History of Party;ffrom the rise of the Whig and Tory Factions, in the reign of Charles IT, to the passing of the Reform Bill. By George Wingrove Cooke, Esq. Vol. I-I. Alacrone. This book will be useful to many readers as an ...

THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... e and his own, was prepared in con- cert with the King, and was intended to sound the alarm against Cailton House and the Whigs, when a still more fa. vourable opportunity of making a breach with the latter un. expectedly offered itself in the Catholic ...

THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... stormy public meetings in Yorkshire, where it poured oil on the troubled waters, alid saved Pitt from the vengeance of the Whigs- a At this time Mr Wilberforce mounted the table, from which; under a great wooden canopy befbre the high sheriff's chair, ...

THEATRICAL EXAMINER

... standing. ino onus probandi now lies upon any man who says he 15 not acommrissioner, the only doubt on seeing a nevY TV among the Whigs is, inot whether he is a commisslotes or not, but whether it is tithes, poor laws, boundariesO boroughs, church leasesj charities ...

THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... adept, and continually shows how much such intimate familiarity as he pretends to, whether with his Whig idols who are removed from the scene, or with his Whig rivals who remain in possession of it -how much, in other words, extreme interest or extreme pr ...

IHE LITERARY EXAMINER

... when shearing Solomon's pigs !-There's our Sir Richard,' says Toni, I fancies himself a liberal, 'cause by sticking to the Whigs he hopes to carry the Cartholic question; but Iii everything else,' says Tom, ' Sir Richard's as stiff a Tory as Queen Elizabeth ...

THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... or infectious; at the same time, the chances of escape from some of them are verv small indeed-small as the propor tion of Whig lawyers raised to the Bench (that venorted seat, smeared with gums of glutinous heat) who do not, in a few months, break ...