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Examiner, The

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London, London, England

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391
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Type

389
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The Examiner

THEATRICAL EXAMINER

... it's iirst apliearance for thirty successive naihts by tbe allusions that were clapped by the' Whigs against the To- ries and by the Tories Mack against the Whigs; it had poems and pamphlets written UpoI it ; it was translated by the Jesuits into Latin, and ...

PLAYHOUSE NOTES

... a parable of the day, describing the Whigs in the worst colours possible, the Duke of Guise standing for the Duke of Monmouth. In 1683 appeared City Politics, in which Crowne made a violent attack upon the Whigs. The miserable hypocrite,. Titus Oates ...

THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... the entire future wellare of England is concealed, or rather, I should say, is plainly tnanigst and when the personsof this Whig ministry, for 'arious reasons, now forsake the field of battle, their principles, en the other hand, taoe possession of' it ...

THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... had then few states- men ill their ranks, and their influence was felt in the division rather than in the ?? Whigs of 1763, no longer the Whigs of Cing William or Queen Anne, may be justly termed the founders of that distinguished party which bears their ...

THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... Reynolds, the friend of Burke and Fox and Shelburne, the First Lord of the Rock- ingham administration, the darling of all the Whigs of the last century-endeared himself to the com- mon people of England by qualities too rarely seen in the greater ornaments ...

LITERATURE

... the prevailing feeling, both among the moderate Whigs and the great mass of the Tories. Sir Henry Hardinge told Sir James Graham that he supposed we should all go out the next morning. Many of the Whigs thought it impossible the Government could succeed ...

LITERARY NOTICE

... show him, after a few democratic gawbols in the outset, gradually operated upon by an intercourse with the borough-possessing Whigs, venal dealers in liberality, high-church Divines who can bend only to a sense of interest, and holiday Tories who can almost ...

FINE ARTS

... have all more or less of interest and talent, and several are truly exoellent. WVe might particular ise the one resenting the Whigs preparing them- lves for office: that exhibiting George the Third and Napoleon as the Brobdingnagian and Gulliver; and T ...

TO WALTER SAVAGE LANDOR, ESQ

... DnEr'NDA EST -the blue book of the elder Cato, on the return of that right honourable gentleman from his expedition as one of the Whig commissioners for examining the affairs of Magna Carthago-was merciful and complimentary compared with the language held to ...

THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... presents to you on a superficial view:-the loose amorous gallant of Charles the Second, side-by-side with the cool-headed resolute Whig of William the Third:- but on closer inspection there is little found to wonder at. In other words, there is nothing in it ...

THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... whole world is divided into tories andl whigs on the one hand, and the prince regent and Lord MIoira on the other. And in Carlton House you see a perfect Divine Comedy reversed-beain- ning with the paradise of the Whig party anid plunging thruglh its purgatory ...

THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... we read this: - The Rockingham Whigs must be esteemed as a revival of that party which had obtained for the country the Revolution. of' 1688, and had established the House of Hanover on the thronii. The virtue of the Whigs had greatly declined under Newcastle; ...