Refine Search

Newspaper

Salisbury and Winchester Journal

Countries

Access Type

34

Type

31
3

Public Tags

No tags available
More details

Salisbury and Winchester Journal

MR. BRIGHT ON REFORM AND THE POSITION OF THE GOVERNMENT

... Stanley—from the Opposition. Suppose that all the old Whigs —and Ido not speak of them without respect, because in times past tho country lias had great service from many them —but suppose the old Whigs were quietly deposited with all symbols of national ...

The special services under the dome of St. Paul's were resumed on Sunday evening. The great building was ..

... sex-vice, the music being magnificently rendered by choir of about 300. The Bisliop of London was the preacher. The Northern Whig states that William Carleton, the eminent Irish writer, is suffering from severe physical infirmity, which totally,precludes ...

Court and Fashion

... him the memorable round robin that drove from power. Others argue, with more or less of reason, that Mr. Horsman, who was a Whig Lord the Treasury thirty years ago, and Irish Secretary seven years ago, and whose merits as debater are transcendently superior ...

The Literary Journal

... 66, Brook-street, W * This is a smartly-written pamphlet, exposing what the author deems to be the selfish conduct of the Whigs. He maintains that Parliamentary Reform is not likely besaScto?y under the Russell Government, as the country has not that ...

LATEST MARKETS

... betray too soon and too openly the links of the coalition for some time suspected between the disaffected minority among the Whigs and the great body of the Tories. The game has thus been rendered too obvious; and each succeeding move is watched and weighed ...

OPINIONS OF THE PRESS ON THE NEW REFORM BILL

... Grosvenor has taken; but his unhistoric name can well be spared from the roll of the supporters reform which enlists the old Whig houses of Cavendish, and Seymour, and Russell. The notion that the Government may accept the resolution framed against itself ...

BY ELECTRIC TELEGRAPH

... Parliament might justly repudiate anything which they had done. In conclusion, he made forcible appeal to the independent moderate Whigs to be wise in time and not to hurry themselves prematurely into that tomb in Westminster Abbey, in which the hon. member for ...

Imperial Parliament

... and predicted that no bill would pa£g which was framed with such an utter disregard to the views of the Conservative and the Whig parties. He denied emphatically that the resolution had been drawn by a Tory hand, and in dealing with the objections the course ...

Imperial Parliament

... the opposition to this moderate measure, predicting that the success of such coalition might dissociate the great body the Whig nobility from the popular cause, and warning them that in a contest with the popular party on one side and the nobility on ...

BY ELECTRIC TELEGRAPH

... loss to the country, a greater loss to the House of Commons, but the greatest loss of all to the Whig party. That eminent man would not have counselled the Whig party to reconstruct their institutions on the American model —(cheers) —and to profit in time ...

MR. BRIGHT ON THE REFORM BILL

... the Government had departed from the rule of Whig government in past times, and sought advice at that end of the House where he (Mr. Bright) generally sat. (Laughter.) He was not disposed to deprecate the Whig party, because if we looked back for 100 years ...