IRISH DEMOCRATIC ASSOCIATION

... pa led majority, and there' would be a Tory ministry, tr nt, with Lord Stanley at its head (groans) ; and 0 of bad as the Whigs xiere he prayed the Lord to th hedeliver him from Stanley. (Loud cheers and oh led laughter.) What did the people gain by he ...

LITERATURE

... the authorities set over them, while Radicals in the ex- tremest sense of the word, are favoured by our Govern- ment. The Whigs assuredly have much to answer for, and the Canadas are going from us before their natural time, and of all revolutions, moral ...

Published: Sunday 10 March 1850
Newspaper: The Era
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 1271 | Page: 10 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture 

PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS FOR THE WEEK

... in his case to a conspiracy on the part of the Whigs. He- says, 1My defence of lthe Irish re. pealers in 1848 still rankles in the hearts of those parties; my recent exposure of Lord Clarendon and the Whigs in Cork, have filled. their cap of bitterness ...

Reviews

... in the air, and cried The Charter and no Surrender!1' are nowliterallyeatinlg your own words ! You, who have denounced the Whig and the middle classesas infamous, called e them all kinds of hard names, designated them the greatest tyrants beneath the ...

TO THE FUSTIAN JACKETS, THE BLISTERED HANDS, AND UNSHORN CHINS

... principles which 'it seeki to acquire. What it ild would the English press say, if the pres of fi France was to denounce a Whig Government, lo 10 ?? eits oicy Would it not designate it as a he nsoentandimpertinent? Is 'not the Times rL aware that the ...

Reviews

... the air, and cried *The Charter and no Surrender ! are now literally eating your own words ! You, who have denounced the Whigs and the middle classes as infamous, called them all kinds of hard names, designated them the greatest tyrants beneath the sun ...

Reviews

... the air, and cried The Chaiterand no Surrender ! are nowliterallyeeating your own vords ! You, who have' denounced the Whigs andithe middleclasses as infamous, called them all kinds of hard names, designated them the E greatest tyrants beneath the ...

TO THE FUSTIAN JACKETS, THE BLISTERED HANDS, AND UNSHORN CHINS

... Irish liberty.' -DNIEL O'CONEasL. M1 CHILDREN, I have given you two quotations from fooRE, the poet, who was pensioned by the Whigs ; from O'CONNELL, the Liberator, who pensioned his family and his relatives upon the country ; and from Lord BOIUNGBROKE, a ...

THE BIGLOW PAPERS

... citations. The former of these epistles is avisibly elicited by what Mr. Biglow considered the aunprincipled tergiversation of the Whig party, in endeavouring, by selecting their Presideutial can- didate from among the conquering generals, to ap- Ipropriate sorru ...

POETRY

... Don't you observe you are mere Resurrectionists Trying to get at the grave of the laws,? Honest Peel strangled them, Then the Whigs mangled them, Coffined, and sank therawith Coedden's applausoe. Any such notions I ?? yout had best bury Deep in thegrive where ...

LITERATURE

... present crisis Blackwood comes forth with all his strength, to the aid of those who ire opposed 'to the policy of our present whig-radical -rulers. The, political articles, based upon incontrovertible data, are, 'clever,. searching, and conclusive. A vigorous ...

THE INFANT PRODIGY.—THE WHIG SURPLUS

... THE INFANT PRODIGY-.THE WFHIG SURP'LUS, Miy nanie is Surplus. On the various Bills Mly iaiter something doek'd-a frugal Whig, Whose constant care was to increase his store, And keep his overplus, myself, in hand; But I had heatrd of squadrons, and I longed ...