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... WHIG AND TORY Twenty Year*. Being Study in the Development of the Party System between 1815 and 1835. By Cyril Alington. (Clarendon Press. 12s. 6d.) Tliis is a pleasantly written history containing aome excellent etories, besides some gentlemanly cartuona ...
... WHIG LEY'S NATURE says CHEW fThis time k*s her knitting needle, but often it's pencil or twig. She chews en something when she's busy or wants bo think. Meet the simr end it isn't |ust silly habit. To keep the jaws working is an instinct rider than mankind: ...
... Tories and Whigs The Tories waffled pa. e and the Wh:gs Qifren. a heit.- lPs at this. leaned rn utnre Lady Ma-liain. and The final quarfr! be:ween Alm. Morley and Mrs. Freeman ratite a v:olflit interviow in Apt il 1710. Aft e r that the Daohess never ...
... The Whig Attitude. -There is something pathetic in the pose of the leading Whigs, as they mournfully protest that, although they could not join the Government, they nevertheless remain as robust as ever in their Liberalism, and most devoted followers ...
... future to formal separation. In the first place, if the Whigs dissent to some extent from the Radicals, it does not follow that they agree in all essential respects with the Tories. The words Whig and Tory still represent a real difference not only of ...
... character and his career, is that he was the last of the Whigs. There are men to-day whom our po litical jargon dubs Whigs there are still prominent members of the old Whig family; but they are innocent of Whig- gerv, they have little in common with the men who ...
... Whigs and Radicals.-- During the last week or two we have heard hardly anything of those dissensions in the Tory party about which Lord Randolph Churchill had so much to say. Whether or not there were serious differences of opinion among Conservatives ...
... regarding each other with increas ing coldness. The Whigs would unanimously support the suspension of the Habeas Corpus Act, whereas the Radicals consider that the proposal is a mere revival of despotism. The Whigs, while anxious to do justice to the Irish peasantry ...
... in home and foreign policy was imperatively required, and the Whig principle that there was to be no breach of political continuity. Thus they fought the Boers in order to please the Whigs, and gave them their liberty in order to please the Radicals ...
... Whig)ley Pelloiv artists and actors came to laud his work at a cocktail party hed in the gallery. And laudible It too. He paints in vivid, sweeping strokes. at home with the canvas and with his subjecta. Perh, most appealing are the portraits. some line ...
... THE WHIG DECADENCE. Harrow, however, says the Dean, became the school of the Whip, and the decadence of that Party affected its social dignity. His deliberate opinion is that the first Home Rule Bill wee indirectly a damaging blow to Harrow, as it set ...