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LITERARY EXTRACTS

... Insurgenin teo mercifully. AnidLauderdaletold Charles, with anoatb, tbat the duke had been so civil to the Whigs because he was himself a Whig In his heart. This made 'it a, court word; and, in a little while, all the friends and followers of the duke ...

ST. PATRICK'S DAY

... have been levelled; thus exterminating, liv banishing, and perhap . lig, three-ftiturths of the labonring classes o- Ireland. Whig and Tory Governments axe all the a i same to the poor Irish; or, as an Irlebman once said. com- co- Paring the persecution ...

[ill]

... Locke King's Tenpotadeir, neither of whom, of course, can have a chance of winning on their own. merits. Russell's Woburn Whig must have a good'ahance for this, race. ?? has performed ver well at different times - and, although rather off lately, we ...

LITERARY EXTRACTS

... spirit ran to a height which the better sense of the present day would not tolerate, and can scarcely realise. In many towns, a Whig would not sit down to the same table with a Tory, and their wives and families would not show euam- mon civility to each other ...

THE LOVE KNOT

... of; the; day 'after its publcatio qite seneogh for ,any -good -news, -it had' to t1 hi _egides,- there.were the country aes Whig'and' Toy leas ha.but'sid'did rlot think, mutech of them, fbr we knilw teci t6'sj,iuid distrusted theWhii' arul Uns heoamese ...

ST. PATRICK'S DAY

... had been a pleasant one aci indeed. He did not knowwhetler to call it a traitor chair, because in its embrace it had clutched Whig and Tory, Catholic and Protestant, and men of every b1r shade and creed. That old chair had to undergo a hit great numberof ...