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Examiner, The

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London, London, England

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391
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389
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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

... says, employed all his sagacity and exerted all his influence over the king, for the purpose of keeping together a Whig Ministry and a Whig Parliament. Not moved from his purpose, either by the treachery of some of his colleagues or by the violent enmity ...

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

... tolerate anything. He does not think badly of the Tories even, when he thinks the Tories disposed to help the Whigs that are oet against the Whigs that are in. It is not till disappointed in this reasonable hope, that he delivers himself of this excellent ...

PROVINCIAL LIBERALITY AND PROVINCIAL ART

... non-conformity was then visited, down to the present day, most of their descendants have remained attached to Dissent, and to those Whig principles which were at that time so intimately connected with the cause of religious liberty. Mr Lombe Taylor's father was ...

LITERARY NOTICE

... Pertinax and a Macsycopharnt, but scarcely in a Sir Walter and a Scott. What says a poet, who ducks to nothing less than a Whig Lord, on the occasional meanness of genius ? How with that strong mimetic art, Which is its life and soul, it takes. All ...

STATE AND CHURCH

... merchant, of Milbanlk, for a short time M.P. for Malden, Conservative; Mr J. G. Itebow, of Wivenhoepark, who professes moderate Whig principles; Mr Hamilton, a barrister on the Home Circuit, Conservative; and Mr Havens, a non-practising barrister, of the borough ...

LITERARY NOTICES

... Parliamentarv Reform; Restrictive Laws; Liberty of the Press, and one or two manre. 'Th ese subjects are treated in the best Whig styfe, which of Cottrse touches some of tbern very tenderly, especially Parliamettarv Reform. It is easy to be strong against ...

THEATRICAL EXAMINER

... away-but pricked to it more by auctorial jealousy, having failed where the other excelled and by jiacobite prejudice disliking the Whig even more than the Laureat, dethroned his first adopted Hero in the Dunciod, and raised to that bad eminence the luckless COLLEY ...

THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... undoubtedly the concluding one, enti- tled Plain Whig Principles. In it the programme of the Liberal Party is, for the first time since Mr. Glad- stone's defeat in 1874, definitely propounded by the Whig official organ. It has long been apparent to dispas- ...

THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... position in the house. The regular Opposition appears to have been limited to eighty-two. Of these, thirty were the nominees of Whig proprietors, and fifty-two represented the popular party. While there is no very weighty addition made by Mr Massey's new volume ...

THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... for the purpose of effecting the return to parliament of honest and able men, it is impossible to describe the rage of the Whig and Tory lords and ladies. The manufacture of members of parliament had been so long an ex- clusive monopoly in the hands of ...