WHIG CANDOUR
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... respect for the political gush eagacity of the papers referred to and their car- in a raspondents. I submit that, inasmuch as the Whig- Rc at Radical party have always displayed the utomost hos- boll. tility to Irish Protestantism, not even special plead- easy ...
... great questions with which Lord RUSSELL had to deal, his Whig bias and thorough party-training unquestion- ably injured the tone of his policy. With regard to the oppression of Poland, his Whig principles rendered him thoroughly restless, and his par ...
... worth our while to inquire. Certain it is that no Whig official, high or low, has yet ventured to tell the country what his party is willing to do to obtain its confidence. There might be some hope of the Whigs if this silence was the effect of shame. We all ...
... ABUSE MR. BRIGHT. _ _, . -- - - Some warm friend of the Whig or Conserva- tive cause, it matters not which, should write treatise on the art of abusing John Bright. ts as irnportant to the Whigs as to the relies that Johla Bright should be abused, and ...
... transpire just on the eve of an election, in which Whig rule is hang- ing in a most uncomfortable balance of suspension. A certainty of the fact would doubtless strike off j some twenty or thirty Whig members, and the } loss of that number would prove ...
... acquiesce in the monopoly of administration by a few great Whig families; that Reform and Libe- ralism are not mere pass-worcte invented to faci- litate the admission of scions of three or four Whig ducal houses into the high offices of State. Of course ...
... emoluments. But the Whigs are in difficulties. They feel that political power is slipping out of their hands. They are, therefore, about to develope their principles; and Lord AMBsiEReLEY's article is apparently intended as the key-note of a Whig crusade against ...
... Carlton Club is fatal to them. A truly Christian Whig, when smitten, as Mr. OSBORNE has been, on the right cheek, would doubtless have turned the left cheek also to the hand of the smiter; but truly Christian Whigs are rare fowl. Had Mr. OSBORNE at once admitted ...
... 1863:-Couservatives, 312; Peelits, 11- Whigs, 234; and Radicals, 95. In 1862:-Conservatives, 307; Peelites, 12; Whigs, 238; and Radicals, 96.' Whilst in 1861 the Conservatives numbered 303; the PeeliteS, 14; the .Whigs, 240; and the Radicals, 91. It would ...
... influence of Whig tyranny (hear); whereas in the county of Essex they had at this moment, Sir Thomas WVestern's son representing the borough of Mal- don; and during the time that he (MIr. Beresforo) had been connected with the county he had seen two Whig minem- ...