CLTJB-LAND
... clubs in St. JameaVstreet” may mean either Brooks or White’s —may mean either that another quarrel has broken out among the Whigs, or that the Tones have followed the example their rivals. ...
... clubs in St. JameaVstreet” may mean either Brooks or White’s —may mean either that another quarrel has broken out among the Whigs, or that the Tones have followed the example their rivals. ...
... for ether contests. The land question, for. instance, is far more hopeful for the Consarvati«tß than the Church is. The old Whigs have never cared much for the Church, but they have always cared a good deal about the land; and while they .would view the ...
... since been held by Lowthers, whose vested interest in these dignities seems to have been acknowledged alike by Tories and Whigs ; by Lord Melbourne no less than b Lord Live ool, the Duke of Wellington, Sir R. Peel, and Mr. israeli. But tempora mutantur; ...
... that she is the most inhospitable country in the world next the country of the Somalis. LIFE PEERAGES. Supposing that the Whig Earl and the Tory Marquis persuade the House of Lords to agree to life peerages, is there anybody who will accept the boon ...
... Campbell, and has thus united the ducal houses of Northumberland and Argyll ; and now within this present week the heir of the Whig Lord Halifax has taken to wife the daughter of the Tory Earl of Devon. Unions of this kind would have been impossible fifty ...
... Count de Jarnoc gave their most courteous and hearty reception when the - Bret deputation alighted, and conducted them the dfa whig-room, where the Prince, the Conn teas Jarnac and her daughter, together with Colonel Elphinstqne and Mr. Pickard, were waiting ...
... for going in for entire destruction. He deprecat and he deprecated Mr. G! ed any Prime Minister, whether Conservative or or Whig or Tory, who, iberal, failed to manifest any 4 istinct in bidding for power, ig ohn Pakington responded to the policy. toast ...
... least until been won, be counseled the Conse! rvatives to ubite all coo e machinery of the new law has been fairly tested. My Whigs and apd tives and they yet ut the overthrow of thet ief reason is, that although Church-rates have become stitution they loved ...
... Liberals will accept rather than bring about a collision between the two Houses. Much will depend‘ upon the conduct of a few Whig peers like Lords Russell, Grey, and Westbury. All three of these, it is pretty well known, are favourable to a concurrent endowment ...
... eatisfaclion. The Listorit* usd of those fortunate gentlemen are ful'y **} *■ The Minister llmsla, General A G. furhas active Whig politician, governor Pencsj '.v«u» the secession struggle, and one of the among the loyal governors the Northern - 1 . was ...
... or with apotheosis. The truth is, none of those statesmen stirred the imagination. There is nothing poetical or heroic in a Whig lord or a genial octogenarian on the one hand, nor in either of the two Ministers who think that the highest statesmanship ...
... the cost of thirteen lifeboats. The committee cannot help visit. Prince Arthur merely expressed his acknowlede cordially than Whig the ladies for much of their prosperity, ments. At twelve o’clock Royal Highneas landed, Ifc “gratifying fact, and one which ...