THE NEXT LIBERAL MINISTRY
... The Spectator does not wish see Liberal Ministry jaat yet, and points out as the reason the nnfitneaa of moat of the late Whig Ministers for their posts, in view of the great requirements the coming time. ...
... The Spectator does not wish see Liberal Ministry jaat yet, and points out as the reason the nnfitneaa of moat of the late Whig Ministers for their posts, in view of the great requirements the coming time. ...
... as is. SINOLZ DC:IE7BU ACTION ILACHINES, 1.. in Illawsilare. U NICIRSAL FEED mAcnies. kor podia. New Maks taw CM Ix. :Tim WHIGS!' a HOLBORN HILL. LONDON. LC. ...
... slight abbreviation were much to be wished, Let us say that the Church, like the Whigs, must be dished. But since coaching his friends the great Disher's been busied, Whigs, Tories, and Church mnaywell call therdselves Dizzied. C. M. The British Archwological ...
... every Liberal was a genuine Whig, an admirer of Somme, a firm believer in the doctrines of Fox. Men had grown up to whom Whiggism was nearly as obnoxious as Toryism. They considered it as illiberal for a certain number of great Whig families, on the strength ...
... abstract rights o them onarchy are boldly assailed under the old mantlet of love for constitutional monarchy (regulated by Whig doctors) now taken out of the dying hands of the ancient rude donati by the Radicals nud philosophers. Some time ago. furious ...
... position and justify his vote for the abolition of tue Irish Church j but he soon fell away, and began to maunder about the Whigs of former days—what they did aud what they left undone—spitting venom upon their successors, Gladstone especially, who, for ...
... men like Mr. Forster. Mr. Childers, %fr. fitanatield, and their like, as well as the gentle. men of the old Cab net or the Whig school. The orce of oratory in the House must no longer be unlervalu.•d ; and a declaimer like the present H are Minister 'honk ...
... to 1819, when he succeeded to the barony of Deere, was one of the pioneers of Parliamentary Reform. He was selected by the Whig party in the House of Commons, in 1810, to bring forward a motion for an inquiry into the state of the representation. The ...
... tree, an end his lease near— A poor farmer sooner a precious deal Titan Prime But what me most strange appears Is, whether Whig or Try, mostly reaps hut soofV« and sneers, liitt.*.ul o* praise and glory. Putty nigh all the peapeis and fl ishun reviews ...
... Chelsea 60 King Alfred -40 Michael de Basco I 100 Talk o' th' Hill Courtrnantle 100 0 by Bro to Bird on 40 0 by Thormanby— the Whig—Dr:4We Sunflower dam ren 50 to 100 to 1 any other. IPSOM DERBY. 25 Pace 2,5 Saffolk 21 See-saw 25 Orion 40 The Earl 40 Untie ...
... to hear men like Mr. Forster, Mr. Childers, Mr. Stanstield, and their like, as well the gentlemen of the old Cabinet or the Whig school. The force of oratory in the House must longer undervalued ; and a declaimer like the present Home Minister should be ...
... able to refer with ease to the well-recollected periods in which that act of justice was commemorated. The ablest of literary Whigs wrote of deep and solemn thankfulness for the purest political pleasure :—“ The thundercloud, whose pressure took away our ...