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SPIRIT OF PUNCH

... have been, And queerish bed-fellows I've seen, But never aught like this- Then swelled the wrath of Gladstone's tail- To Whigs and pries shall Progress quail ? And Stansfeld was the cry- But Clarendon upreared his head, His cigarette fung by, With ...

GREAT REFORM MEETING IN THE MUSIC HALL

... of, thea, best tests. of., its godness that, perhaps,,we' can have, is the 1 estimste formed, of i ,y, a, few, renegade, Whigs' g i'andthewhqleof the Conservative party. TlheiF: e abuse of it q.i a goo4 test of its. rIerits-(hear,, , hear).; They.are ...

THEATRE-ROYAL

... exer. tions for the regeneration of Italy-always the en. ?? hope of his life-procured him the intimacy and regard of the great Whig politicians of the day; and, though strongly opposed to the more violent Italian party, with whomhe always refused toscthis ...

GLEANINGS FROM THE OWL

... Ay l there's the rulb For in that Opposition sleep some dream May come, when we have fairly shuffled off This weary eoil of Whigs, to give us pause; For who would bear the scorn of lukewarm friindh The taunts of foes, the goads of Radicals, The pangs of ...

THE QUARTERLY REVIEW ON MR. GLADSTONE

... de& own power, and that of those aho thougbh with him, may have hbeu ?? 2vitong. A lasting occupation of 'dfite, snub as the Whigs rjnjed after the death of Qoeea Arne,ard ?? ?? Bill, in wnich the subemee of an all-powerful. Minister swould not be menaced ...

LITERATURE

... , in' the article on! ~'lhe!Change' of' ?? of; Mr Gladstone's favourite,.measuie,,f Rifor,, and the -dowv~nfall of, .the Whig~ Admnistr~itbon?, the pol~itital winter o~f the ..Qaarterly doeye so~with s ome. misgivings. ( He is not iery'eureathat the ...

LITERATURE

... During it peecih made by hlim nl tIt Faneuil Hall, at a time when the Whig poorty wios on tba verge ho of dilseeluticn, he capped io rhetorielal elialox thins: 'Geotllemmc, , s if thl Whig party is dissolved, whers acm I to gou Mlr Wceldell ;t Phillips, ...

LITERATURE

... contributors to a newspaper published in Edinburgh called the Bcacon, the articles in which, aimed at the leading nen on the 'Whig tide, gave great offence. Some letters and pieces of satirical poetry of a similar kind Iaving appeared in a paper styled the ...

THE MAGAZINES

... 'broA 'lose of the ?? great gullf., H's 'blia th .'dii sjioti~i 'i ithe ' affai ;o the' -Alabaini, -'but't considers ,the- Whigs-'and 'Tories .are equally to .blame' for, the 'foreign policy. which has procured: the ill will , pr con- temapt of ahnsat ...