THE LIBERALS AND THE BILL
... to put Ra- . i' the ad of the great Liberal party, ; 3 * have foreseen that it would so * nie Lu this / Alas for the poor Whigs! -.v had ,cli a comfortable time of it for so ,~ ng ...
... to put Ra- . i' the ad of the great Liberal party, ; 3 * have foreseen that it would so * nie Lu this / Alas for the poor Whigs! -.v had ,cli a comfortable time of it for so ,~ ng ...
... proper proportion, and mere labour kept out, the House of Commons would be stronger, and the cry for Reform silenced. The Whigs, like bad chess- players, stuck to this game even after it had been baffled, and, while possessing popularity, could only he ...
... Members began to look around theta and draw breath. There is little wonder if they are astonished at their own handiwork The Whigs, acting as if they had been spiteful at the success with which the Conservatives were dealing with Reform, had bent all their ...
... last !,ill and illnt fa t laeasesre out of which e'acrao; e'tV Sold 1) kllocked in debate, andl t cthlng left bitt the old Whig proposal, ceald lie ruinI to the Cabinet. As the con- ?? 'tSs oTgii'lle, smiall inzducement was necessar. ?? it was foueld ...
... for the city of Exeter, are Conservatives. Mr Bouverie, who has been for a long period Member for the Kilmarn ock Barhs, is a Whig and something more. Mr Russell Guroey is one of the representatives for Southampton; and Lord Penrhyn, as Colonel Douglas Pen- ...