THE PARLIAMENT OF SALISBURY PLAIN

... your projects pursue, And this noble Idea keep ever inview; Let but Nambers and Noise the ascendancy gain, And then both ~Whigs and Tories, on Sailsbury Plain, Will lie Down, down,-all of you down! lllackwood . ...

Our Library Table

... your projects pursue, And this noble idea keep ever in view Let but Numbers and Noise the ascendancy gain, And thee both Whigs and Tories on Salisbury Plain, Whill lie dowsn, down-all of you down. OUn OWN FIRESIDE, for January, 1866.-London: W. Macintosh ...

Our Library Table

... your projects pursue, And this noble idea keep ever in view Let but Numbers and Noise the ascendancy gain, And thefe both Whigs anl Tories oil Salisbury Plain, Will lie down, down-all of you down. OUR OWN FiRESIDE, for January, 186.-London: W. Macintosh ...

LITERATURE

... , that. is a candid political history of the days of the Grenvilles,, the Pitts, and of the sweay of the great overbearing whig families. i!hia history is now put 'within reach of the poorest book otub. Australia for tbe Consumptive Invalid 2B an 2xoellent ...

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 ...

LITERATURE

... There re 27 eases still to be dis- plosed of, but the number may he increasedi indefinitely by fresh arrests. We (Nortthern Whig) believe weD are right inr sttingthat one, at Sleast, if not more, of the Dablin deteo-t tiveeha arriived in town in pursuit ...

LITERATURE

... your projects pursue, And this noble Idea keep ever in view; Let but Nsunbers and Noise the ascendancy gain, And then both Whigs nod Tories, on Salisbury Plain, C Will lie Down, down,-all of you down I ie Cornhill Magazine. No. LXXIII., January. London: ...

THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... above a hundred Parliament men who drink October beer meet to consult affairs and drive things on to extremes against the Whigs; the Saturday Club, of which Swift was a mem- ber, although he grumbled at the number of its members and the weakness of ...

CONSTITUTIONALISM OF THE FUTURE.*

... deal with it. The Radical, he says, is the most successful in his answer; he denies that inequality is a fact of nature. The Whig hesitates between Radical equality and Conservative exclusion. The Conservative believes in order alone, without recognizing ...

LITERATURE

... is inserted in a virulent Tory poem, puslishilel at the time when Tonson was Sccretary of the Kit-Cat Club, composed of the Whigs most distinguished as statesmen and writers. In a dialogue between Tonson asd Congrove, published in 1714, in a small volume ...

THE MEETING OF PARLIAMENT

... Fleecing the millions, and keeping them down, To feather their nests, and to prop up the Crown. These class logisitors, the Whigs and the Tories, However divided, still always agree; It is their ambition, and highest of glories, To crush down the people ...

LITERARY NOTICES

... ministry is that Middle Party, consisting of the Lowes, Horsmans, Peels. Elchos, and all the vigorous men of the constitutional Whig party, who are holding strictly aloof from Earl Rue. sell-a party hardly yet formed, but contain- ing the elements of the ...