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Reynolds's Newspaper
WHIGGISM IN A BAD PLIGHT
... Therefore is the Whig party doomed to suffer the torturing suspense which can only intensify and never obviate the miseries of a predestined doom. Meanwhile the country reposes in calm indif- ference, knowing the issue, and knowing also that the Whigs are robbed ...
REYNOLDS'S NEWSPAPER
... exactly the case withour two great State parties. The Whigs are in possession of the body politic, which is grievously vexed and weak- ened by their operations. The Tories are most anxious to expel the Whigs, in order that they themselves may enter and lodge ...
REYNOLDS'S NEWSPAPER
... shall be always ourwe. Sir George Grey, in this matter, proves himself to be I be type of the popular conception of the modern Whig 'hst conception includes cold-blcodedneos, pitilessness, Ba obduracy to the appeals of the poor. It is this estimate of the ...
REYNOLDS'S NEWSPAPER
... person who asoed for information, whether in parliament, or out of It, unless the inquiring party happened to bo an ariiatonrati Whig, Sir Charles Wood was uniformly supercIlious, and sometimes even positively insulting. Thus, In 1847, at the time of the great ...
REYNOLDS'S NEWSPAPER
... we deeply regret the conduct of Lord Derby and his subordi- nates in this matter. We do not went Lord Pal- merston and the Whig-Radical party to have every- thing their own way. We do not desire to see England, and everything English, reduced, and confined ...
THE DISTRESS IN LANCASHIRE—INHUMANITY OF THE GOVERNMENT
... Farnell down to Preston, aid a few other places, to ad. monlsh the capitalistu about their duties at the present, moment, the Whig Ministry has done nothing to rescue the starving workers frbm the famine which threatens to devenr them. Indeed, the present ...
APPALLING DISTRESS, AND PEDDLING STATESMANSHIP
... teurothe traelvels about than the distribution of 09o,,, t]d idshes of ocee amongst their hungry c ~n~ereon partislans, the Whigs get on con- t fugey benogh. But, 5es I before observed, they are eiotrly ipeble of mae ing a grt crsialbygreat and yttepee ...
REYNOLDS'S NEWSPAPER
... gain them, The prcsent difficulty, should itnowbegot ever, will besue- ceeded by another and another to the end of time; and Whigs wil rule, ancI Derbys play ?? countier, and poor- rates will r se, and industrial catastrophes will periodically occur, untit ...
ITALY AND THE ENGLISH NOBILITY
... Sin,-That famous old vixen, Sarah, Duchess of Marl- borough, declared upon one occasion that to her certain knowlcdge the Whigs were all rogues, and the Tories all fools. I am net very sure but that the distinguishing lineaments so boldly traced by the ...
GLADSTONE AND DISRAELI.—THE TORIES AS NATIONAL ECONOMISTS
... Toryregine isc' ?? been accempanied by a bloated pension list. An '5 Dr the miserable ioreign and colonial war by uttb, coder Whig Administ'atione, the ?? of the rtn mzkc n ?? may rely upon it that neither in Torres bad brn WEould these warn be reduced if ...
POLITICAL STAGNATION—THE DEAD PRINCE AND HIS LIVING PARASITES
... undertaking; and even in the, event of Mr. Disraeli and his friends coming into poesession of the places now filled by the Whigs, they would be, seriously. purzled what, more or what else to do with their power: thn is, done by the present set of place-holders ...