Refine Search

THE RUSSELL PENAL LAW

... Catholic Church than this proposed by the Russell Whigs. Any man of ordinary judg. ment, having the opportunities possessed by a mem her of Parliament, must have seen that no other statesmen but these Whigs could be found, in the temper which the penal law ...

THE NEW PENAL LAW

... Down with the Whigs (cheers). Down with the Whigs, who had starved the peop!e-down with the Whigs, who had striven to corrupt every class, and who would endeavour to smake them a nation of slaves and place beggars (hear)- 'down with the Whigs, who would ...

THE NEW PENAL LAW

... adopted. r Mr. W. Watson proposed the next resolution. He said- From this spot (humble as I am) I warn the ministers-be they Whig or be they Tory-not to attempt or dare to assail, by any impious penal enactment, the divine institutions of Heaven. The power ...

COURT OF COMMON COUNCIL

... would 'shortly b6*tran'- is, ~flrred' to thle Al tomnb of' all the Capielett '!-L-thE dolumrAOn're- It. ceptacleof so ;nany 'Whig Abertioas.- (Heatr, hearI.) .:w1 e y, (Mr. 'Gilpini',would' exhort the ifembers of that courlt tp :O. cast aside'their finar ...

THE NEW PENAL LAW

... a measure. -Let them not be afraid bf the base traitors to their religion and country who voted to keep in office the vile Whig cabinet. Bv whom, he would ask, were the reins of *government placed in the hands of Lord John Russell ? By O'Connell-the glorious ...