CHARLES JAMES FOX

... the chosen representative of Whig principles, and one to whom the traditions of the elders must have descended in their full integrity. No man in the whole world probably is so well qualified in these respects to write a Whig view of Mr. Fox's career -which ...

AYRSHIRE CURLING SONG

... stanes spinnan. Wi' a vhii 'l and a Cllre)e tin they sit roaLn' tier tce. Then hurrah ! c. It's anl uneclilie story ?? beith Whig snd Tory Mlann ayc collyshaugy like dogs osre a bane; And a' denominactions ore seantin' in paticece, For na4l Kirk irillthole ...

SCRAPS FROM THE COMIC PERIODICALS

... Farewell Performances-Auch Ado About Nothing. THE Conservatives always boasted that they were tbe true economists, and not tne Whigs. They have proved it this session, for immediately the tailors' strike began they 1a0t no time in learning how to turn their ...

FASHION AND VARIETIES

... and sang the songs allottod to her in a manner calculated to add tohcer already great popularity in Belfast. The Norfthern Whig in ite notice of the concert aays, In the song I 0 Vago for,' Mise Fennells vocalieation wan very broad, pore, and distiuct ...

LITERARY NOTICES

... to such shifts and pretexts in order to assail the Church in Ireland, there can be no good ground for his attack. That the Whig-mRadicals intend to make the Church in Ireland their great battle-ield in IParliamuent is certain. In the mean- time, it is ...

POETRY

... For the Tories at Greenwich have eaten whitebait. Right pleasant in AngLtst to drop down the river, When you've beaten tile Whigs, and the Bealeses, and fate, And made the loud member for Birmingham sither- To laugh at them all and to eat your whitebait ...

Literature

... self converted. Generally, however, his course was that of a moderate whig, though certainly not a party whig; and it is singular that in his old age he .became the victim of a whig intrigue,whici is thus Idenounced by Lord Brougham: I It was not by mere ...

THE REFORM ACT OF 1832

... had been still further stimulated in lursuit of political changes by the dethronement of Charles X. By all these events the Whigs profited in proportion. Theyhad, as was suppoted, once more a king upon the throne not averse to the policy of Reform; the ...

NEW BOOKS AND NEW EDITIONS

... Thomas Danvers, a brave, drinking, hunting, duelling, King's right, D.i grzit man, and his wife Penelope, a stanch Puritanical Whig lady, who feasted, in the absence of her husband from home, Monmouth on his short road to the block, and always fasted on the ...

OUR SCHOOLMASTER

... 3'Tie you wvho have carried the day- 'Tts you who are truly the iean of the Thus , W~hom your colleagues submissive obey. The Whigs may in cold opposition detest, -. And charge thee wlth cunniog and fraud, Whet matter, whllst feasted and clad in their beet ...

THE PRINCE OF WALES AT THE PARIS EXHIBITION

... been lately favoured on the vexed question,-What, under present circumstances, should Reformers do? The veteran chief of the Whigs, wise by experience, and calm in his comparative seclusion from the jar and turmoilof thefray, judges more justlythan some ...

THE AGRICULTURAL DEPARTMENT OF THE PARIS EXHIBITION

... heblocks should 'from them should be sold.r. copies THi3 LiBEsAL I WHi'.-The London correspon- dent of the Afanchester Guar4ian (Whig) writes : A6The 1rumour is. -revived that, after Easter, the right hon. member for Lewes will retire from the position he ...