THE GAME OF LIFE

... pflatv 1i1 a ist 1'dd 4rie6s- And 1imm v a 7adiat, it gilt I leai5 tY deeply sviar'ii ?? hif tihell. N't an olriic'reliull Whig ?? holion TO ilimt be irhirtg ailole r iigi t0i1, Wbere malty 3 ?? iiai., i, SP>31 ln ?? Iriiiliq v ih ciiitcit; 1)euum'd -0*iU ...

WARNING RECEIVED BY LORD C—GH

... the clans of corruption are scattered in fight! They hurry down stairs, for their place and their pension, Woe, woe to the. Whigs who such trifles can mention The wit of G-E T-r insults their disgrace, They 're first proved te be fools, sand then laughed ...

Review of Literature.—Science and the Arts

... Continent ; and ?? ' W' 1 I cw ?? I hc c plans long 1 pointed out vrithi di tiluctues' a ?? 0i e1lecal to alI experience, by the Whig party in this county, were at length adopted-after ?? vacillation, and after the memorable Jacl-ia- a-boc succession of comnmanders ...

THE MIRROR OF FASHION

... whole body of the now calumniated Whigs, faithful to the principles of the Rlev'olution, were again in a manner instinctively at their posts; and Lord Ersskitie, then at the bar, was requested, or rather urged by every Whig in England, to give up his lucra- ...

Selections

... IHoB. Will do the job, Next time he sues w Cur Cab'net rues; - And now that L,% nm c-l 's not worth ! dianmn, And all the 'Whigs pi Ar'n't worth two igs. . The real case is, V The; -.int our p!aces V Grcr.itaid sqzal, : G-d r--al 'Cat alln IMINOR, 01 eA ...

Poets' Corner

... (For party, mind, I do not care a fig; For why should Whig or 'Joi'y cramp or wvarp us?) And when the House of Commons was sent packing, lie *-alued not a pin what jokes wiere crackiig. A boiflde Whig he call'd himself, 1Though he, like other men, might ...

Review of Literature.—Science and the Arts

... much more popula11(r among lriih political mene than at any time subsequent or antecedent; birt thein, us isvoi as Illw, the Whig l'art ?? divided on thin important question, though they all agreedl that the (3overnment ought to be Parlia- I mnentritry ...

POETRY

... -what will lie utter next? $ooner should I in Paris look to see AD English army sent their guard to be.' 'the consent of the Whig Father was however ob- tained, contrary to all expectation, though not very graciouSlY accorded; but a still more unpromising ...

Original

... wihich may be ae ac purely the SELSF WTEEMSTT, to which M. Ca ing, !e aind all the- whole hosti of boroughnaongers, whether at Whig or Tory, belong. Their sole business is to take co careof number ONE, and apposeeveiy-atemptto subvert our glorious constitution; ...

THE MIRROR OF FASHION

... dream, by his pretty little scheme, A To have niore than the cat and her skin, skin, skin. id WHIGS AND TORIES.-TThe political distinctions e of Tories and Whigs were not known till the reign of i J CHARLES the Second. Torach, in the Irish or Erse a language ...

LITERARY NOTICES

... the request of the Whigs, defended them. The same portion of the Whigs who opposed the revolutionary war, opposed the coercive mea- sures which were proposed and carried by Pitt's Admi- nistration, and finally,- a portion of the Whigs opposed the uncon ...

ORIGINAL POETRY

... vapours, And taking lip the daily papers, So that asll pieasanter intelligence Gives way to Tory cants of allegiance, And to the Whigs, those shilly-shally gents. But let him, pray, put closer to 'em An eye so fitted to see through 'em, And he'll perceive,!hat ...