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THE PARLIAMENT OF SALISBURY PLAIN

... your projects pursue, And this noble Idea keep ever inview; Let but Nambers and Noise the ascendancy gain, And then both ~Whigs and Tories, on Sailsbury Plain, Will lie Down, down,-all of you down! lllackwood . ...

POETRY

... Freodom brostdeoiing slowly dsins In a land of just altd old renowan, Of is settled Fa'ith and a stable Crown: For Tory or Whig or Rlalloial we, Gililstotiiie, Miighlite, whaeltever ire le, We ars all of tin thoroughly loyal, you see, Garibaldi! ...

LITERATURE

... d Tory. Hoe an Crocker ran in couples as Secretory to the Admiralty and Secretary at War. They wrote together against the Whigs in the Neis ?? Guide. His separation from the Tories arose from personal pique against the Duke of Welhngtion in reference ...

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 ...

LITERATURE

... highly. At present Mr. Bright and his friends ore supporting Lord Paluocrotol, not because they love the Whigs, but beustuse they lsate the Whigs less than they hate the Tories. They know the WVhigs oire squecezable. Thei know they love office fil nieore ...

AN ELECTION STAVE

... added that tas noble earls and Iord 7 Palmerston were, at with the exception of Lord Melbourne, the only members ad of the Whig Cabinet who obtained the premiership after id Ean Gre 's retirement from power. It may further be sh remarkcethat Lords Palmerston ...

OUR SCHOOLMASTER

... 3'Tie you wvho have carried the day- 'Tts you who are truly the iean of the Thus , W~hom your colleagues submissive obey. The Whigs may in cold opposition detest, -. And charge thee wlth cunniog and fraud, Whet matter, whllst feasted and clad in their beet ...

LITERATURE

... Lord-Lieutenapt. Tue 'osame game wha played In' Isis father's favour, The Whigs wanst to make the Lord-Lioutenaucy of Devonshire hergditai-y on~ tl a~ Fortesone family. 'A real Whig move.. Lord Ebrington is a claverislhman witht plidlauth~opicl instincts ...

LITERATURE

... unrelenting severity the vagaries and blunders of the Foreigns Secretary- the 'little itiatalsnudiag on the shouldere of the Whig aristocracy l-a iS believed by Liberals to be a great statesouain' the 'tan l hose reputatioi Mr. Disraeli once said was ...

LITERATURE

... thit history is the remarkable simi. larity of oircmetsmsances between the commencement and the close of Ibis periosd. The Whigs Caere its oftite Its the year 1842 jttst as they are ino 1862. Pasties in the Honses of Commons waet so nearly balanced ttsot ...

LITERATURE

... hoist with their own petare, than thel Bill was shelved. Reform was not only abandoned, but treated with contempt by the Whig occupants of the Treasury Bench; and the Minister who had once shed tears when forced by his colleagues to postpone his Bill ...

LITERATURE

... comprehensiveness the Taxation of Ireland. He has described from a personal experience of many years the general course of Whig mal-administrmtion of Irish affairs; and in this pamphlet he tells with point and terseness, some times with eloquence, truths ...