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Derbyshire, England

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POETRY

... glass of wine; The day brave Lyndhurst's eighty-eight We've won by eighty-nine. Chorus-Then let us toast, &c. ve Repentant Whigs and Tories true Fi Did honestly combine; M The dirty Coalition-crew StU Are licked by eighty-nine. inj St. Martin's Hall may ...

POETRY

... deceive you; Jack's fever has gone off, but I forgot to say ?? went off with it' (Laughter and S cheers.) It is so with the Whig ardour for the 61. fran- lo ebise for poor Jack the working man; it was a raging w fever as against Lord Derby's lGovernment; ...

PICKINGS FROM PUNCH

... the masses of the people to political ?? the same speech. TOUCHING THE RUSSELL RESIGNATION.-=We knew it was all nonsense. A Whig is like the old French Guard-he dies, but never surrenders. A BOAST WORTHY OF JOHN BULL.-A new pavement has been laid down ...

A SONG BY EARL RUSSELL

... alone. The State may droop, the Church may drown, ty Your John will dance his jigs, X The Whigs once more shall have their own, a d, And Jehn shall rule the Whigs. l .i The Express says the report of the Commissioners on the n, Revenues of the Irish Church ...

POETRY

... and carve a cock-pheasant, This wilful Unlimited Loo. The wild little rogue is a Tory, And oft will her satire make rmad Some Whig, as he tells his dull story- A qme crbq platitudinous Rd. SkSh ~aleI jcoats, puns, puddnl ursec ~ 3be~s noi n srth atilb. a ...

POETRY

... For the Tories at Greenwich have eaten whitebait. Right pleasant in AngLtst to drop down the river, When you've beaten tile Whigs, and the Bealeses, and fate, And made the loud member for Birmingham sither- To laugh at them all and to eat your whitebait ...

POETRY

... Cranborne. Please Cranborne, come home! 'Cvce.r'erne. dear Cranborne, come back to us now, And stick to the old Tory blue; -'here's Whig, and there's Rad., and there's no one knows who, bltt, none of their colours will do. 1t5fth Peel and with Cronzborne to serve ...

A VOICE FROM THE EXE

... good at the town by the Exe. a I at With power irresistible, the author of Christabel, she He Used long since to sweep the Whig-Radical decks; car it- Though kin to the poet, his actions don't show it, cor ad This renegade Coleridge who flies from the ...

POETRY

... POETRY. CLAVERBOUSE AND THE BURGESSES OF PERTH. A JACOBRE BALLAD. Their sabres are drawn and their carbines are cocked- Alas for Whig cities whose gates are not locked I The porters they've shot, and they've stolen the key&- Alas for poor Perth with such wasrders ...

LITERATURE

... mercilessly sketched. The u church article, though clever, is somewhat extreme both in language and treatment. It deals with ' Whig Bishop S, laking. MAacmillan's Magazine improves vastly upon acquaintance, L and we think this month's number the very best ...

THE INTERNATIONAL EXHIBTION

... reign. If it were I l not for the state of the Continent, we should find it in s our hearts to say that expulsion would do the Whigs good. If they really want nothing, as their chief's pro- t gramme seems to prove, they may as well give up the d 1 reins to ...

LITERATURE

... to run with a certain leader, an who conse- W quently epend their time In hurrying from one stable to the ether;- while the Whigs with a scratch team-ecrews ail of them-are kind bowling along ever the road, and making a tine Journ ey of it. 'chanl Sending ...