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Your results for: whig
PARLIAMENTARY INCIDENTS
... bread scarce while multitudes were famishing for want of work, the Tory majority raided a perfect storm of execration, and the Whigs mattered, with downcast looks, 'He ought to have retracted-' asked him next morning why he had not done so ; and he said, with ...
THE IRISH CHURCH QUESTION
... utterly and disastrou1ly failed to do n in the ten times thirty yearn precuding. It has baen a 6 persid distinction of the old Whig party that it bas not n ?? up and laid down principles and opinions accord- 1 ing as they happened to he profitable mnd popular ...
MORE FRUITS OF THE REVIVAL,
... MORE FRUITS OF THE | I'REVIVAL,9, (From the Norern Whig.) We have received a copy of ;an extraordinary. printed paper, which we are informed has been widely crculated through one of thenmost flourish. ig districts of the county Down. To appre ciate ...
CONTEMPORARY PRESS
... kinda of antagonists. ! The Conservatives detest his political views; the Radicals cannot abide his Church views; and the Whigs will not comfortably follow a man whose family was unacquainted both with Lord Somers and Mr. Fox. The struggles of so powerful ...
THE NEW POOR LAW COMMISSIONER
... Ireland, rendered vaeant by the accidental deathi of Mlr Senior. In parliament Mr. Bellew las been a steady Oupporterof the Whig. govern. ment during the many years he has had a sea2 in the House of CoMmmons, Ilia appoirtment to the Irish poor law boaid ...
THE IRISH CHURCH
... a long and close embrace, each fancying that the other was a tool, to be used for any purpose of political ambition ; the Whigs, not having the courage to begin to make improvements which they see to be necessary and right, have accomplished little, of ...
LONDON CORRESPONDENCE
... these are from the Provinae of Ulster, and Oce of them is alleged to be extracted from a journal called the Daily Northrrrn Whig. The detective police are on the track of the scoundorel, who, I should add, bas assumed the name of a member of the House ...
LONDON CORRESPONDENCE
... nobody eared to listen to, so that Mr. Dillwyn rose to a half-empty House and to members longing for their dinner. As the Whigs were not in opposition they refused through Sir 0. Grey, to endorse their old factious policy; but Mr. Gladstone, who rose ...
MILL FOR WESTMINSTER
... progress than Icy living man-let us see how he answers, whec he is asked to take that place for which he aristocratic scion of a whig family con- odently seeks. hfr. Mill is thoroughly impressed with the t,,%vy responsibilities that must weigh on a ?? repr ...
MR. MAGUIRE'S MOTION
... Lreland, and to demonstrate tbat one of the primary causes of the evil was the want of adequate protection to the tenant. Whigs, Tories, and Radicals, Roman Catholics and Protestants, while differing on poihts of detail, were agreed in this, that the ...
OUR LONDON CORRESPONDENT
... but manfully expressed in the House of Commons, first by Lord Palmerstcn. as the repre- sentative of the Government and the Whig party, and then by Mr. Disraeli, as leader cf the great Conservative party, followed by Mr. Bright, who, perhaps, had be not ...