THE MIRROR OF FASHION
... cause. He was an inflexible friend to the liberty of h ...
... cause. He was an inflexible friend to the liberty of h ...
... been rejeoted, but in delivering the curse, his voice bgcaile hoarse Bnd inefficient. - I.\lii ttO5!tlt li. Ifthe 1',Yilte Whigs sain Ti,rles refuse to agree, The Fiete must c;;ire hv a -ITlo-do-se. ...
... Worth can claim, or Goldican buy, e Must yield alike, In dread Dfviion's hour, - To Country Gentlemen's Majority. Nor ynu, ye Whigs, impute to these the blame, If some falnt cheer its puny homage pays, While through somo long-drawn speech, its periods lame ...
... But there ive miust own, that these settlers of nations Ar, not, every incli ot em, total negntions,- Are not (tlioough thre Whigs, like myself, mtay lament it is -Sn as I say) absolutely nonentities. -VY sEy, for ,istance, althu'ih he may pass For biothdirj ...
... pray can von, or anv of your readers, inform us if some of the writers in the EtdinoburgA Review are notpensioners of the Whigs, or in some wvay or other sharers in the venality by which we have so long been governed? It seems to me to be nearly i'mpossible ...
... nized liberality of the Magistracy of that place, the ti Provost then in office was some years ago, toasted at the v, Whig Club as .s the Whig Provost of Scotland.- , The same liberality of opinion (now unfortunately oi pressed upon all minds by the most ...
... blao IMITATUD FROM COWPERs, Ind There is a Bard, .who by his note, ofe And by the chairges of his coat, thed Seems Deist, Whig, or Tory; the An huge inditer of Court Lays, par 'Whence hie obtain 3 a Wreath of Bays, Soao And wue a Dormiotiry. wit On ynchurch ...
... difference e-en our Prince would bother, Who well might take cite Marquis for asnther: THE ANSWER. Our Rat's unlike Hamlet's-Whigs, be not so touchy, He's not s dead for a ducat,' but lives for a Ducky. Thursday the New Musical Fund had their annual. grand ...
... Under-Graduate mlzob, . ?? ~ ?? a. ci ' Master ,f a mighty College, t Wirhanit his robet hehold him stand, C, A VWhomntot a 'Whig will now nvt knowledge, h le tiurn hiq how, or shake his hand. , s 'Is the sahle Jr-CICS-N frd ? I Thy firiend is gowt-he hil1vs ...
... leads, a COBBETT to accuse a Sir I FRANCIS, a Sir FRANCIS to attack the Whigs, the i Whigs to recriminate, and the people's men to quarrel s [Ie h and envy each other. The Whigs, the Inde- s ad pendente, and the People together, are more than a S match ...
... Iliss Garcia, ~Mrs. Bemetzreider.-_ After whics the favourite Burletla, called The SPORTSMAN AND SflEPHERfl l or, Where's my Whig? Sir Barnaby Basel, Mr. Meredith; Theodore, Mr. J. Jones-; Dash Mr. Seebhing.-~To which will be added, an entire new grand ...
... Bishop B3URNET. His 'I reign, as that of the undoubted legitimate lineal de- a , scendant of JAMES II., would have united Whigs and . s Jacobites, in obedience to what the one would have r -, considered -his constitutional and ;the latter his divine sight ...