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Examiner, The

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The Examiner

THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... afterwards distinguished. I must also add, that, although he owed his introduction to Burke, his adherence, however, mild, to the Whig tenets of Burke's party may not have much gratified the circles of Belvoir. in a letter to Sir Walter Scott, Crabbe says- The ...

THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... yond the ground upon which the Whigs have found their coigne of vantage. He is opposed at Fanlchester by a good-humoured, care- less Tory candidate, and a sour nominee of the Whigs, Mr Pzigmore. To ensure the defeat of the Whig, the Tory is. induced to resign ...

THEATRICAL EXAMINER

... indelibly should be graven on his memory the noble, the generous conduct of Glasgow to him-Glasgow, where men of all parties, Whigs, Tories, and Radicals, all combined to receive, to cherish, to honour him, a stranger, in his itinerary professional career ...

PERSONAL NEWS

... to state that the sons and daughters of the King, with the exception, perhaps, of Lord Munster and Lady Sidney, are decided Whigs. Lady Errol, Lord Falkland, Lady Mary Fox, Lady Kennedy Erskine, and Lords Frederick and Adolphus Frederick Fits- clarence; ...

THEATRICAL EXAMINER

... retired from the contest. - Bridgewater.-Col. Tynte does not retire, on the contrary, he is certain of his return; and another Whig will also contest the representation with Mr Broadwood (the pianoforte-maker)) and a Mr Martin who have made a very lame canvass ...

THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... Foreignj has appeared this week. Its politics, short of Radical, but of the opposite extreme to moderate Whig, may be described as imrno derate Whig, or Whiggery run mad, like the gentle Tilbhurin in her frenzy. Its matter might be considerably below the ...

THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... his life, the eve of his first impeachment:- His time for escape was short: the toils were already closing around him. The Whigs had concluded their investigations: even the articles of impeachment were ready;-every night expectation was excited of the ...

THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... independence; he is, in truth, as little of a Whig as may be: but he wants temper. We must be allowed to whisper this. What purpose of historical elucidation has he proposed to serve by these attacks upon the Whigs ? In the absence of that, what private quarrel ...

THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... Parliament, his sym- pattmy and respect for the treaty of tihe quadruple alliance, a work of Eng. lish radicalism, wbich the Whigs themselves had signed with repugnance, rn4 in the spirit of a base compliance with the revolutionary politics of the Palais ...

THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... opinions of Herr Von Raumer agree most nearly with the Whigs, and with Whigs he seems to have chiefly associated during his stay in England. There have been periods when a visitor, with his Whig affections (whose manuscript was to be corrected by the ...

THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... length, on the memorable 1st of March, 1831, the Whig cabinet produced their bill, themselves alone being aware of its contents until it was laid before the House of Comrmons. - An abstract of the Whig bill would not describe it so well as an account ...

THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... power which it now enjoys. - As an anthors fei, if any, have.ever equalled him in the kindly, beuevolent, and bunmnizinz spirit whig. diktates 'and governs all his various and beautiful writi#s. No author can be ruoreiaffectionately admired by his readers; ...