'NEXT SESSION.'

... in them-has not independence enough to f shake off the mastery of those feeble leaders. Is It clings to, and backs up the Whigs, not be- ? cause it either trusts or respects them, but t. simply because it lacks confidence in its own Lo strength and power ...

JUVENILE CRIME

... ing adventurer. The Whigs, who are slowest at taking the initiative, never fail to oppose (and that most provokingly, because with smiles of approval and professions of favour) the measures of practical reformers, for the Whigs say one thing and mean ...

Published: Sunday 28 April 1850
Newspaper: The Era
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 1239 | Page: 9 | Tags: Crime and Punishment 

THE ARREST OF MR. DAVITT

... League rooms, anid groaned the Government and Gladstoue. Groan - were also liberally giveu for *- Bucksehot Forster- aind the Whigs. Mr. )illon, MI.P., who caine specially from London. appealed to the people to pre'erve a peaceful attitude, iio matter what ...

THE WORK OF THE SESSION

... Derby could not them posi- tively calculate on etoler than a passive.nnsjrity. The opposition to the Whig Government was founded on the obection to the Whig Reform Bill as a meeaure that did not represent the feel- ings of the country. Under the av'owed inspira- ...

THE NEW LAW OF BILLS OF EXCHANGE

... without exhibiting a further approach to that despo- tism in small matters which always chlaracterises the legislation of the Whigs. The whole system of the county courts, and the luckless bankruptcy statutes, are evidences sufficient of this and might have ...

Ireland

... Frederick Lucas, that the fac- tion of which he is the mouth-piece had more confidence in Lord Derby and his party than either in Whigs or Peelites, There were a number of priests present; and the oratory was of that character which is peculiar to such occasions ...

WHAT ARE THE POLICE ABOUT?

... accepting their thorough and absolute defeat like gentlemen and honourable anta- gosists, the whippers-in end subordinates of the Whig or defunct Ministry have resorted to the scurrility of Mob rhetoric, and, as if the political sentiments of the British nation ...

Published: Sunday 01 July 1866
Newspaper: The Era
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 880 | Page: 9 | Tags: Crime and Punishment 

GLASGOW SHERIFF COURT

... used had ?? is fair the Whigs think (or the Tories think), even forgery-would this ground an action at the instance of every Whig or of every Tory ? Sorely not. And the pursuer being one of a body, as numerous perhaps as either Whigs or Tories, is not entitled ...

THE LATE LIBEL ACTION

... think it our duty to lay a fewv facts in connexion with the trial truthfully before the public. In the last publication of the Wh/ig there is a lachrymose complaint that Mr. Lindsay did not allow his pro- secution to abide the verdict of a Belfast Jury. For ...

TOWN COUNCIL.—CASE AND OPINION EXTRAORDINARY

... newly-enfranchised voters, who as yet have not identified themselves wvith either party-loose fish, in fact, ready for the Whig-radical net. Perhaps, too, Ias the municipal tax-paying period is approaching, this may be only a dexterous move to stimulate ...

THE CHETWYND DIVORCE CASE

... naturally turned upon that subject. The clergyman said he thought the Castle was adopting a course calculated to injure the Whigs in popu- larity, and not provocative of admiration. The gentleman quite agreed with him, and said he thought they were carrying ...