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Reynolds's Newspaper

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England

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London, England

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26

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26

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Reynolds's Newspaper

GOVERNMENTAL VINDICTIVENESS

... to the demonstration as significant, of the popu- larity of the Prince and the unbounded loyalty of the people. But as both Whig and Tory Governments have persistently refised to ex- tend that clemency shown to the chiefs of the rebellion to their humble ...

REVIEWS OF BOOKS

... cirde traced by lbs great whig or Tory alliances. To- day the people g'ar to share power; the men of the pavement want to bo more than mnere steps upn which others may to office Slimb. A national party claim to supereede a Whig, a Tor, or a shoddy laberal ...

THE FASHIONS FOR MARCH

... efficient working class organization for electoral purposes in that borough, for protecting labour againstthe triclks and plots of Whigs dnd Tories, planned to keep out working men from entering parliament, and considers this ana nrgent question for the imnmediato ...

SCRAPS FROM THE COMIC JOURNALS

... nighbourhood. 1 TIInCr iS A TIDE IN TH lt AFFAIPs Os MN.'-The Edi~nbr.wgh Raviv'w, in its anrtide on the past and future of the Whig pirty, stys that the Conservative party has been brought into power by a strong tidal wave. Mr. G'adstore. on this being ...

REVIEWS OF BOOKS

... superior thrift, and took his leave. Unfortunately for H[opkins, he happened to be a Whig,;dand was, moreover, concernedhi varous leans to a G~overnment composed od Whigs. Hence8 possibly, Pope',#. bitter invective- When He kins dies, a thousand lights ...

REVIEWS OF BOOKS

... account of THF ORTGIN OF THE BANK OF ENGLAND. It was founeed by a Whig Government because it was in deeporate want of money, and supported by the City because the City was Whig. Very briefly, tte story was ?? Government of Charles It (nuder the ...

REVIEWS OF BOOKS

... sacrificial mys-| teries. (what would he not sacrifice for a new sensation P) -and our effete aristocratic and bureaucratic Whigs who always grasp at all the spoils of office, ead nearly aiways. desert their followers and allies .in the day of serious' ...

REVIEWS OF BOOKS

... duke, an eminent Tor-, having been appointeo abassador to the Courl of Versailles, where the Pre. mbdsr then rezided, the Whigs took great alarm, and gasolved to got rid of the new ambassador by fair means by foul. A duel was hit upon as the most simple ...

UNDER THE SURFACE; OR, FOLLY AND FASHION

... of the tyranny of his secret police, eh P' Lonr Dujusy having 'aulked in retirement aince Xast August, is going to join the Whigs, and try to upset Beaconsfield's apple-cart that way. H ' X~iNKEMORIASI. Lord Derbyiwis a stubborn bov He wouldn't kiss B.'s ...

LITERARY MISCELLANEA

... ia town. The political clubs for Tories and Conservatives are Whito's the Carltb, Junior CarIten, and the Conservative; for Whigs and Badicals, Brooks's and the Reform. The pr &eaIonal clubs are the United Service, Junior United Sorvice, Army and -Xavy ...

REVIEWS OF BOOKS

... himself in Mr. Whit. i bread, who-either from a 'sense of justice, or, as was, generally supposed, from a desire to sbow the Whigs! -what a mistake they had committed in net 'taking him into their Ministry-interposed, and, without exercising' any ostensible ...

LITERARY MISCELLANEA

... unekilfisl. When the paper was dead, and Lord Beaconsfield had made his reputation with Vivian Grey, it became a commonplace of Whig party warfare to assert that he had been the editor and founder of the Representative, that his flippancy and follies had been ...