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Examiner, The

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The Examiner

THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... have, said he, the impudence to pretend that I ant of no party, and have no bias. Lord Elibank says that I am a moderate Whig, and Mr Wallace that I am a candid Tory, Its another letter, after saying that in his views of things he inclines to Whiggism ...

THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... of Bedford, and re-editing it opportunely, after many days of various fortune, on the auspicious advent to power of another Whig viceroy. The preface is partly political, partly a literary historiette of the career of a young Irish female writer, who dared ...

THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... atll lower houses, aisd by the two great parties coismmossly distitiguislied as Tory and Whig, Conservative and Liberal-tlse Torics representisig the Norman, thie Whigs the Saxois element or principle-thu former loving the country, dwelling apart, cultivating ...

THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... as Mr Adolphus remarks, had fallen into contempt; and the Whig families were no longer ne- cessary to guard the parliamentary title of the house of Hanover. Let us add to this, that the Whigs wore them- selves broken into sections, separately weak, and ...

THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... excellent spirit discernible throughout. Lord Campbell can- didly remarks, in the course of it, that the aristo- cratic Whigs have ever been slow to associate with themselves in high office any one who cannot boast of distinguished birth; but, in a ...

THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... Church of England - while in Ame- rica I have fallen in love with the virtues and good works of the Jesuit fathers;-he is a Whig,-I am an ultra Democrat ;-he is a strict protectionist,-I am a free trader ;-he abhors slavery,-I hold it but a name; -he condemns ...

THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... natural and manly cha- racter ; and it is very painful to us to learn, which we do for the first time from these volumes, that a Whig Government should have made them the ex- cuse for delaying that tribute to the infirmities of learning and letters which it ...

THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... that will mend this matter a little. Secondly, because thereare a great many things which would become one who was always a Whig that would niot become the mouth of one who was bred a Tory; and whatever my thoughts are, I apprehend it to be more prudent ...

THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... such politicians invariably do, plumed himself on not being a party man. He was a Whig when the Tories seere in power, but very much disposed to turn Tory when the Whigs returned to office. He had too sharp an eye for abuses of all sorts not to be a reformer; ...

THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... helps Lord North into retire- ment, dextrously brings him back for the coalition against Lord Shelburne, assumes the office of Whig adviser to the Prince of Wales, and at last, waving one hand to Fox and grasping Burke with the other, vaults into the Cha ...

THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... then) decisive mortification and annoyance. to himself, to the extraordinary good sense and, easy powerful talents of the great Whig leader. Would any reader of Horace Walpole suppose the following to be written by any one but him 7 It has the very tricl of ...

THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... wvas ashamed to indulge, into which of the ranks of the House he would subsequently fall. He became a steadyvoter with the Whigs, occasionally breaking out into a vote somewhat in ad- vance of them; and hence his loss of Weymouth in ] 838,when the Tories ...