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Daily News (London)

CURRENT LITERATURE

... influence, as was believed, of Qucee Adelaide and other persons, it is easy to understand that, a Whig Government being on unpleasant necessity, this-was the kind of Whig that would be likely to be'p referred. As Lord Melbourne proved to be able to recomstruct ...

LITERATURE

... the TiVme took its ground in opposition to the Whig administra-5 tion even before the refvrm enthusiasm had cooled- foreseeing, as the reviewer declares, the certain effebtl of the incapacitv of the Whigs as rulers. The decline of the Times and the rise ...

THE EDINBURGH REVIEW ON THE STATE OF THE NATION

... es of this interest will be very cordially united. Considered as a mere party combination, as resting merelyon the ancient whig connexion and the support a few prominent and historical families, the present government stands oa too narrow a basis to be ...

THE LITERARY SEASON

... advise our Newry friend to cultivate that know- ledge of references which, according to Lord Maltesbury, is knowledge ?? Whig, ...

AT LAST!

... folly fails In fretful midges as in floundering whales, The briskly little, and the blandly big. Tory Thersites, Zoilus, as a, Whig, The lumbering Ajax of the Caucus clan, The twveed-clad Cato of the Working Man, AU the mixed motley host that townwro ols ...

THE ROMSEY AGRICULTURAL SHOW

... appeired from most of the speeches which had been reetly deli- vee at such meetings a that, that it was difficult to may what was whig and what was tory. In fact, nobody semed to be able to make out the difference between the two; for the last two or three yea ...

HIGHLANDERS AFTER THE '45.*

... almost srints in comnitrison with those cittte-liftin- Jacobite villaims, the Alacdonlllds, %whose &layniores were red with Whig blood. In his detestation of them, he rojects their claims as Lords of the Isles, to treit, otl the footin of indepmciednt ...

THE AGRICULTURAL SHOW AT PLYMOUTH

... result was that words came to fisticuffs, making such a noise as to bring the admiral on deck to see what was the matter. Whigs and tories were equally anxious to explain that their mutual pum- melling had been exchanged in a strictly parliamentary and ...

The Court

... the reports of a probable dissolution of parliament, the final resignation of Sir Robert Peel, and the restoration of the Whigs,—all these events tended to prevent that feeling of confidence which is necessary to the regularity and of business transa ...

LITERATURE

... and tie great families; the administration of Lord North; the formation of the coalition ministry, and the breaking up of the Whig party; the King's illness, and the contest on the Regency question; the war against France; the Irish Rebellion, aud the Legisla- ...

LITERATURE

... III, The two works are in fact supplementary or comple- mentary to each other. In the latter we have the doings of the great whig houses chronicled by them- selves; in the former we have the story of the 1' Grenville Connexion, who, employed origin- ally ...

LITERATURE

... prac- tical views maintaining their ground. The political article of the number is upon the Ml-dadmitistra- tion of the Whigs; a fertile subject, on which it may easily be inferred, that the dissatisfaction of the Church of England Quarterly arises ...