ANOTHER WHIG GRIEVANCE
... ...
... ...
... the claret. It is somewhat wsttby of remark, that the address in the Upper House will, tls Year, be moved by Lord Portman, a Whig magnate, who Secsnded the first address preeented by the House of L~rds to her present MBajesty, juat twenty years ago, when ...
... So by all ?? let us have Lord Clanricarde ugein. Let us accept him with the calm placidity of men who know the vitality of a Whig. Is the noble nlorquia not oue of the hievitables, whose mission it is to be ready year alter year to give the country the ...
... Davison was, as it happened, struck upon several committees, and was most assiduous in attendance upon all his duties. But ?? Whig never found a word of praise for his assiduity. Is it not a suggestive fact that, although his name appears in the division ...
... to educate you for nothing? I am perfeetly wvilling to ?? to any other' fund if it be thorghlt necessary- (cries of 'your a Whig, dodgcr')-1 have my opinions and yon have yours. Tile Popo subscribed ?? He did not-you have only the F'eenrriaa for that!) ...
... fouds and public inquiries in parliament connected widi Mr. Coppock's personal services to past adiminiatratione and former Whig and Radical candidates for seats in our If W islature. Such bygone transactions are rathor mattrs I ur future history than ...
... O'Flaherty and Martin Joseph Blakee-Lord Dunkellin and Colonel French-the quondam Young Irelander and the Old 'Irelander-the Whig and the In- dependent Oppositionist, are placed by this i impartial and searching inquiry in the same humi- liating list, as ...
... ingly, with a precision which instilnctive appre- lhension of the crisis dictated. The Ncew Senatc persisted in drinking the Whig narcotic; they qvould believe that the danger had passed by; they wlOd4 not believe that to send succours by the Overland routc ...
... Charter of r831 as a £20 occupation franchise. He is not averse to the small reforms heralded in the quarterly organ of the Whigs, buta bona fide revision of the incomplete act of 1833 is as odious to him and to Lord Derby as the right of petition was to ...
... five Roman Catholics in the ' Twelve. Consider- ably more than two-thirds of the practising bar are Protestants; but the Whigs desire to proportion the number of judges, not to the demarcations within the hall of the Four Courts, hut to the ratio of ...
... those dukes is the head of an illistriolus old Englisil race that, in late years, h11s bieen. particularly steadtast to time Whig connexion. These rejections ofthie garter, with the circulinstances of' Lor d Harrowby being in the Cabinet, and Lord St. Germans ...
... proeccution of the Rev. Messrs Conway and Ryan. The Whigs were even worse enemies of Ireland than the Tories (boear, hear). Hle was decidedly of opinion that the bill as it now stood should be adhered to. Both Whigs and Tories bad given their sanction to it. IHe ...