THE GOVERNMENT AND FRIENDLY.SOCIETIES
... tbe Liberal policy is to turn everything into a Procrustean bed and compel every- one to act according to the most approved Whig system, however it may run counter to his own notions. ...
... tbe Liberal policy is to turn everything into a Procrustean bed and compel every- one to act according to the most approved Whig system, however it may run counter to his own notions. ...
... Constitutional party in the city. The Whig camp is divided. Mr. Tillett is the worthy representative of more advanced Radical views, whilst Mr. Warner may be described as the Government candidate, favoured rather by the old Whig party. Attempts have been made ...
... colleagues, and sent Mr. Disraeli into Office with a large majority, commissioned only to rectify the misdeeds and errors of the Whigs, and to cany out a Conservative policy. The subject of Local Taxation, however, has not been overlooked, and already very much ...
... supposed to be the very perfection of naval construction, went down, with all hands, in a light breeze; and a noble Duke, Whig of the Whigs, but who had vast experience on the subject of the Navy, and was not given to speak smooth | things, uttered the wel ...
... thing they had to do was to come to terms with the Whig party. In all special elections Nonconformists would do well if they could not obtain a can- didate ready to go upon their principles — if the Whig was not a Liberationist — to abstain altogether from ...
... was the Conservative candidate, and he had for opponents Mr. Charles Callis (afterwards Lord Western), _ not undistinguished Whig statesman, and the famous W. Pole Tylney Long Wellesley, for shortness called Pole Wellesley, nephew of the Duke of Wellington ...
... claims on his services, Colchester must not go to sleep and let Dr Willis creep j n . There are enough good Churchmen, both Whigs and Tories, to keep him out surely. Mr. Grimwade will not be returned for Ipswich— that is a settled matter. If Dr. Willis ...
... to have threatened seriously to impede Mr. Odger's prospects in Southwark, and at the same time to protect his plutocratic Whig rival, Sir Syd- ney Waterlow. The High Bailiff is, perhaps, right in not trusting too much to the ambitious working-man, but ...
... We can describe his position in this respect in no better terms than those used by Col. Brise, as being that of a young Whig aristocrat, farming for his own amusement. We have heard a great deal of the numerously si ...
... it was made by tbe French. Mr. i Butt reiterated an assertion called iv question by some English i papers, that in 1846 the Whig Government were ready to offer | O'Connell a federal union as a compromise for repeal. He I made that statement, he said, upon ...
... remarks by urging a re-union of the severed elements of the Liberal party—Churchmen, Dissenters, Ultramontanes, Republicans, Whigs, Repealers, Home Rulers, and such like—truly a happy family. A statement which reaches us by way of Aden communicates a report ...
... it. It seemed too bad that it should fall to the disposal of a Ministry confessedly in a minority and be lost to those noble Whig houses who had been brought up in a tradi- tional belief that they had a vested interest in every plan of emolument and power ...