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- POETRY

... POETRY. THE HOPES OF THE SESSION ABE ALL FLED AWAY.—A WHIG LAMENT. AIR— The Flowers of the Forest. I've seen Pam laughing, the Derbyites chaffing, The Derbyites chaffing so jaunty and gay; Now the Whig Tapers low burn at Broadlands and Woburn The Hopes ...

OPINIONS OF THE PRESS

... Ministers has aetU-Kf rendered their position unassailable.— Morning Herald. THE WHIGS AND PATRONAGE. Why is there always an outcry throughout the sountrf for the Whigs, which the Tories cannot command 1 WhY, if you talk to your fellow-traveller by rail ...

[No title]

... to bring Lord Palmerston and Lord J. Russell into amity, the chief basis of which alliance would be the existence of a new Whig Premier, when a new Government comes into power, and who has not been Premier before. ...

THE OLD AND NEW REGIME

... sufferance. At any moment, said the Whigs if chose to unite, your tenure of office is not worth a moment s purchase. If they only chose! But free-will no longer existed. The numerous sections into which the Whig party was split so irreconcilably hated ...

--POETRY

... like your Independent' set. Lord John is Liberal, for his soul delights In Magna Charta, and the Bill of Rights He quotes Whig Peers from Somers down to Grey— An earnest Oligarch, tlio' past his day Speak of Reform, he shows his last new Bill, Bat Roebuck ...

LORD DERBY'S GOVERNMENT.I

... subject, he was invaiiably answered with saucy levity, and treated with insulting jibes by the chief jester and master of the Whig oligarchy that domineered over the empire. They cannot but remember how inquisitive representatives of the people were squashed ...

THE NEW ADMINISTRATION

... appointed others received from private communications. What is the fact During the long Whig reign the appointments of justices at Bath, although not exclusively of Whigs were so partial that the great majority were gentlemen belonging to that party, although ...

THE LATE GUN ACCIDENT

... attached to he old Whig party, was the personal friend of the Marquis of Lansdowne, and co-operated with the noble marquis in all those measures which brought out and tesiifiedto the well-understood and broadlymarked character of the Whigs. The deceased nobleman ...

THE NEW MINISTRY

... enough that the country should be a little chary in giving its confidence to the Conservatives after so long a submission to Whig rule; but we believe that the veil is now removed from their eyes, and they view with feelings of delight and surprise the ...

---THE CARDIFF & MERTHYR GUARDIAN w,,..,.,.,',.,....,,'..,-.,'''''''''.....,,...,...,,,,h'''''.....r,-''

... proceed on, nor do we opine that any other wi;1 find favour with the nation. Nor is it likely t j be carried further by the pure Whig p ,rty, if we may take as an index the speech which Sir C. Lewis recently addressed to his constituents at Iladnor. He appears ...

TUB CARDIFF & MERTHYR GUARDI AN ..'-,..,,,,',-,....'v-..,-/.....,.,.,.,-,.,.,,...................,,,,,,,,,',,- ..

... how the Conservatives were taking the wind out of the sail* of the Whins. Wtwt the Whigs had so long been pro; o-ing. he observed, the lone3 would c-irry out, the Whigs had 80 oftn promised a Reform Bdl that it was douht'ul whether they would ever bring ...