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Charles Knight's Town & Country Newspaper

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Charles Knight's Town & Country Newspaper

110.26, 1856.] ---------..........-................-.-- e P f my art, said Mr. Buffcover, I hope or truci.e ..

... ---------.-.-.-- e P f my art, said Mr. Buffcover, I hope or truci.e-cie.4.4.Tuphe dais of the Whigs are numbered. Their 4arsin begins to glimmer upon the wall, and must have th e i r d ay. toust the dogs; but there is no ...

fasted with me; and we went to the sale together. When 'Puck' was put up, it excited such admiration that

... one of L, dia White's small and most agreeable dinners in Park-street, the company (most of them, except the hostess, being Whigs) were discussing in rather a querulous strain the desperate prospects of . their party. Yes,' said Sydney S we are in a most ...

TANCREDI ; OR, THE NEW PARTY

... TANCREDI ; OR, THE NEW PARTY. Brookes's was in a valiant uproar. The young Whig heroes were leaping upon the club-room tables, and delivering the most vehement invectives. The Reform party were rallying their forces from far and near; their paid agitators ...

OBITUARY OF NOTABILITIES

... created of her Majesty's counsel in 1852, and about the sare e time was elected for the borough of Armagh, defeat( ing the former Whig member, Colonel Rawclon, by smart majority. Mr. Moore was a strenuous porter of Lord Derby. 'ACCIDENT TO TILE QUEEN DOWAGER ...

THE LAST DAYS OF JEFFREYS

... names were mentioned in the course of these inquiries, was one who stood alone and unapproached in guilt and infamy, and whom whigs and tories were equally willing to leave to the extreme rigour of the law. On that terrible day which was succeeded by the ...

THE LATE MRS. CLARKSON

... daughter married Sir Francis Wood, a wig -baronet, and whose grandson is Sir Charles Wood, a Cabinet Minister under several Whig administrations. Mrs. Clarkson was for many years confined to the couch of an invalid, but yet the fit companion, the solace ...

Ely Ira ltibrart

... weakness is known to every one. In like manner his opinions, positive and clear as they are, are equally well known. He is a Whig, and the phlegmatic Dutchman to whom it was given to realise more bitterly than most Uneasy lies the head that wears a crown ...

THE TOWN AND COUNTRY NEWSPAPER

... himself proud to be in any society but that of a political club ; but it was a gross anomaly that, belonging as they did to a Whig Government, they should continue to use the Carlton Club. lie expressed a hope that they would hereafter return to their-party ...

CHARLES KNIGHT'S

... adopted by Napoleon. Then, as now, Austria professed to be restrained by fear of Prussia, while England, in the hands of the Whigs, was blind to the perils to which her eyes were at length opened. The Emperor has addressed the following letter to Madame ...

v 41tf4f THE TOWN AND COUNTRY NEWSPAPER

... commented upon the inconsistencies which had characterised the ecclesiastical policy of successive Governments, and especially Whig Govern, ments, in Ireland. The result had been, as he contended, to leave a mass of unreconciled anomalies and unreformed abuses ...

Ely Sue fibrag. THE REV. SYDNEY SMITH

... King had been reading his reviews, and said, He was a very clever fellow, but that he would never be a bishop. In 1806 the Whigs came into power, and Lord Erskine gave Smith the living of Foston-le-Clay, in Yorkshire. Before taking possession of a benefice ...