OUR LITERARY REVIEW

... of his researches and the brilliance of his descriptions-local and personal-will ever be admired, the great Whig historian was too much of a Whig, too much of a partisan, too fond of effect, too favourable to friends, too harsh to enemies, too narrow ...

SCRAPS FROM THE COMIC PERIODICALS

... Farewell Performances-Auch Ado About Nothing. THE Conservatives always boasted that they were tbe true economists, and not tne Whigs. They have proved it this session, for immediately the tailors' strike began they 1a0t no time in learning how to turn their ...

IN MEMORIAM

... there, But we, to cheer their hour of gloom, Will gaily bid them banish care And write Resurgam on the tomb I For though Whig lordlings start aside, And scheming lowe defeat the Bill, ald England never will abide Long to be ruled by Tory will. And vainly ...

FASHION AND VARIETIES

... and sang the songs allottod to her in a manner calculated to add tohcer already great popularity in Belfast. The Norfthern Whig in ite notice of the concert aays, In the song I 0 Vago for,' Mise Fennells vocalieation wan very broad, pore, and distiuct ...

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 ...

FASHION AND VARIETIES

... public career In the Lower House, voted on all occasions with the Whig pa'ty and althoughl an unfrequent speaker in the Rouse of Peers, invariably supported the views and measures of the Whig governments. Oni the death of his fatiie', in (October, 1839, he ...

THE MEETING OF PARLIAMENT

... Fleecing the millions, and keeping them down, To feather their nests, and to prop up the Crown. These class logisitors, the Whigs and the Tories, However divided, still always agree; It is their ambition, and highest of glories, To crush down the people ...

LITERARY NOTICES

... to such shifts and pretexts in order to assail the Church in Ireland, there can be no good ground for his attack. That the Whig-mRadicals intend to make the Church in Ireland their great battle-ield in IParliamuent is certain. In the mean- time, it is ...

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 ...

CONSTITUTIONALISM OF THE FUTURE.*

... deal with it. The Radical, he says, is the most successful in his answer; he denies that inequality is a fact of nature. The Whig hesitates between Radical equality and Conservative exclusion. The Conservative believes in order alone, without recognizing ...

DISRAELI'S PARTY

... party- (And they were not slow to lears), There never yet wa'8s principle But inside out 'twould turn; That what's a lie iCC Whig mouthe In Tory mouths is true ; And Household Suifrage always Was a genuine Tory view. Disraeli led his party Two several tirr~aa ...

Our Library Table

... while he maintained the rights of the Established Church, to repeal or greatly modify those harsh laws with which Whig Governments and Whig Parliaments had encumbered the statute book. He Was honestly desirous of placing upon a footing of perfect equality ...