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... had Well more from Whig than Tory n ...
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... ATTITUDE OF THE WHIGS. The ;mined says — We have reason to believe that Lord Hartington is unwilling to form a member of any Government which proposes to deal with the Irish question on Home Hale principles, and that neither be nor several of Mr. Gladstone's ...
... is to say, Mr. °WISMAR is to show his hand to pacify the Whigs, and he is Dot to play his cards in order to please the Radicals. This is, in truth, a marvellous specimen of Whig wisdom and Whig cajolery. No more powerful argument, no more convincing ad ...
... with ‘the institutions we have imbersted from the past. All ‘thes te 6 incompatible © ith Ube Whig temperament and Whig principles, that aed GOW Co pera. cof Whig with the es jxmemte of A few like Karl Grey apd the Dube of may retain am mdependent but gradually ...
... candidature is but a selfish Whig appeal for that mach-loved occupancy of place, the proverbial ambition of Whig peers. When we consider what Whiggery really is, and then look at the epistle sent in the year 1885 by • Whig peer we shall see that the letter ...
... A WARNING TO WHIG CHURCHMEN r Such is Morley for Nottingham the heading of an ecstatic article in a recent nu: mber of the Patriot. Your contemporary is in a transport of joy at the mere rospect of seeil this redoubtable champion of the beration Soci ...
... WHIG GOVERNMENT A RADICAL’S OPINION OF THE PRESENT who has ing his con- Mr. stituents at Huddersfield, thus, in the course of his h, spoke of the political conduct of the present Cove ernmen' t on the question of Reform :—‘‘ When this Parliament was ...