THE ENSUING SESSION
... as patiently as we may, the assembling of the Legislature ; indulging the hope that this will be the last innings of the Whigs for very many years to come. ...
... as patiently as we may, the assembling of the Legislature ; indulging the hope that this will be the last innings of the Whigs for very many years to come. ...
... and discipline, must march with drums beating and oolours flying, and must not be reiuced to silence the outcries of the Whigs. So speaks their grandmothei; reduce the Tories to silence indeed! it will be a dull day for England whenever that shall happen ...
... must leave the questions discussed by these gentlemen to a more favourable opportunity, simply remarking that nothing but a Whig-Radical combi- nation could everhave produced a tenacity sufficiently strong to effect the cohesion of such heterogeneous political ...
... plunder thle churchs.- (Iloiir, ?? asso- as ciated heiselsef with the Irilsh Romyan Catholics, and the Ss Democrats and the Whigs, anxious to hold ofhice, bribed )ic these parties to rob the Iicicl Chourch; but Sir Robert Peel ut sinal deeted him, and he ...
... by the Liberal ograns. but they gave sufficing answer to the hack Whig question— What is the Conservative policy We know, and the Radicals also know to their humiliation, what the Whig polisy has been. It has been to squander pledges from the hustings ...
... opportunity of recording their vote for a representative in Parliament. Inhisviewitwasofno consequence whether the candidate were whig, a tory, a radical, a conservative, or non-descript, or by whatever political name he might be known ; only let it be understood ...
... au unfortunate circumstance, but it was historically true, that the whigs had never produced a Chancellor of the Exchequer— (laughter and cheers.) He believed some of the leading whigs admitted what said ; but some of them put in a plea for Sir Robert ...
... was an unfortunate circumstance, but it is historically true, that the Whigs had never produced a Chanceller of the Exchequer.-(Laughter and ?? believed some of the leading Whigs admitted what he said, but some of them had put in a plea for Sir Robert ...
... sprung, in a great measure, from the Conservative sentiment prevalent throughout the country. Government, which was apparently a Whig Government, has been allowed to exist since 1859, because it was known that its leader could be trusted to prevent his colleagues ...
... recording their vote for a representative in Parliament. In his view it was of no consequence whether the candidate were a whig, tory, a radical, a conservative, or a non-descript, or by whatever political name he might be known ; only let it be understood ...
... an unfortunate circumstance, but it is historically true, that the Whigs had never produced a Chanceller of the Exchequer. (Laughter and cheers.) He believed some of the leading Whigs admitted what he said, but some of them had put in a plea for Sir Robert ...
... ) We have had for many years past Liberal leader, born and bred in the Tory camp, who, having spent middle life among the Whigs, seems in his riper age revert in heart to the fond recollections of political childhood (loud cheers.) But the ascendancy ...