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Glasgow Herald

AS THE OLD COCK CROWS, THE YOUNG COCK LEARNES

... compass must swell, The more noisy the crowd are; Yet for Lords to throw dirt On the Peerage too bad I call- Lord Russell is Whig, Yiscount Amberley Radical: Goes-in for the masses, - - Would triust to the millions To tool their own drag Without Peers for ...

THE ACCEPTABILITY OF THE DIDACTIC NOVEL

... tionoften find it d~ifficultto graspandrcalise to them. selves 'the scenes and character which it describes. But -n infusion of Whig and Tory, of Church and Chapel, or of Manchester and Oxford, supplies just the avour and consistency which they require. Such ...

AYRSHIRE CURLING SONG

... stanes spinnan. Wi' a vhii 'l and a Cllre)e tin they sit roaLn' tier tce. Then hurrah ! c. It's anl uneclilie story ?? beith Whig snd Tory Mlann ayc collyshaugy like dogs osre a bane; And a' denominactions ore seantin' in paticece, For na4l Kirk irillthole ...

THEATRE-ROYAL

... exer. tions for the regeneration of Italy-always the en. ?? hope of his life-procured him the intimacy and regard of the great Whig politicians of the day; and, though strongly opposed to the more violent Italian party, with whomhe always refused toscthis ...

THE QUARTERLY REVIEW ON MR. GLADSTONE

... de& own power, and that of those aho thougbh with him, may have hbeu ?? 2vitong. A lasting occupation of 'dfite, snub as the Whigs rjnjed after the death of Qoeea Arne,ard ?? ?? Bill, in wnich the subemee of an all-powerful. Minister swould not be menaced ...

THE PRINCE OF WALES AT THE PARIS EXHIBITION

... been lately favoured on the vexed question,-What, under present circumstances, should Reformers do? The veteran chief of the Whigs, wise by experience, and calm in his comparative seclusion from the jar and turmoilof thefray, judges more justlythan some ...

MR GLADSTONE

... question into Mr Gladstone's hands. The chances, or rather the certainties were that the majority of sixty-five would b' to the Whigs what his last victory was to Hannibal. The dis- organisatioi of the Liberal host always begins as soon as its leaders pitch ...

LITERATURE

... them manzsd; They beat our foes by sea and land, And sacred was the British strand When they were King of the Castle. The Whigs, though Tory in the grain, Saw place, and pow'r.if they could reign, So pulled, and pushed with might and main, - TilI-they ...

TWO WORKHOUSE STORIES

... condition of these pauper hospitals has before this attracted attention, and if the smallest inventiveness remained. in the Whig Government would long since have been re- medied. A workhouweougght not to be made a pleasant place, but we may at least care ...

LITERATURE

... contributors to a newspaper published in Edinburgh called the Bcacon, the articles in which, aimed at the leading nen on the 'Whig tide, gave great offence. Some letters and pieces of satirical poetry of a similar kind Iaving appeared in a paper styled the ...

SCENES IN AN IRISH THEATRE

... offence at the hissing of some individuals, an indescribable uproar ensued, and he withdrew from the stage. The .orthekrn Whig describes the scene as follows - On the curtainrising (a good deal after time) it was at once pain- fully evident that Mr ...