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THE POWER OF MUSIC

... asids, ' 'What sfgnifidm for ?? chide For whet was densn bafore them I ' ' Lt Whig end Tory a' groaee ' l)ig sod Tory, Whig and Tery. Let Whig end 'ory a' egres, So deap ypur Whig-i g-inoram, , . 7et Wnig and Tory a' agree, ' To speL this nichit.in mirth ...

Poetry

... gait be proudest. Would'et thou Trath'sfair rerblancesee, All viewless to the rabble, : eep thy soul uabribed and free From Whig and Tory squabble; From fretful faction's hoarse debate, From foiled ambition's canker, From seas of never-ending prate And ...

Peotry

... Ftorgetful of all vain aund worldly things, Our spirits, free from toll and earthly care, Soar far above us, as on angel whigs. t Sweet peace of evening, who can tell its worth t A bonison Divine to mortals given; Its praise cannot lie sung by toigues ...

EARL RUSSELL'S NEW BOOK

... to secure the nnanimity in the Cabinet. I told him that I thought he ought to tell LLord Holland that he was looked upon by Whig politicians as the representative of Mr. Fox, and tat his resignation might break up the Ministry or oven dissolve the Parliament ...

POETRY

... di stity ill of littpyv hours, it 'i wle xith the irtilt Stitall ,II 1xtilOrn flings, Withi telilel'r stittlil of iltsilt Whigs rront ?? Suittovs of ?? flowers: In thv wastrm silent nveary tittie ?? hells but Nvliwperi of Wild bees; 'fit. -l~tles'ssl' ...

SIR STAFFORD NORTHCOTE AT MANCHESTER

... vehemently oondemned in his youth. One of Mr. Disraeli's sharpest sarcasms on Sir Robert Peel was that the baronet caught the Whigs bathing and had run away with their clothes. Who could have supposed when this sneer was uttered that the then ultra-Protectionist ...

MR. DISRAELI AT THE MANSION-HOUSE

... Lower House Mr. Disraeli, characteristically declaring that tho terra ' letting value had beeu introduced into the Bill by Whig poer, consented te ita removal, and at the nstance of remonstrances from the oonntry gentlemen, provisions of tho scheme have ...

Literature

... leading centres, strenu- ously contending against thle irinpolicy anti injust ice of 'The Oirders in Council, -which both the Whig and 'ory Governontest of the (lay devised and suspporte(d as retaliatory measures against the celebrated 1Berlin decrees,' ...

NEWS OF THE WEEK

... what the person is who has been adopted by their leaders. It is well known that Mr. Warner, who is supported by a handful of Whigs, has no chance of success, and if he persists in dividing the Liberals and thus effects the return of a Conservative he will ...

LITERATURE

... other words, there was a tie. A scene of gnera I con- gratolation followed, ?? and a sort of brotherly benevolence ensued- Whigs and Tories were to be seen shaking hands in all parts of the square with the most heartrending indifference, an indifference ...

LITERATURE

... his facts from Parliament- ary debates or other original documents ; and from the works of the greateot and most impartial Whig writers- as the histories of Mr. Hallarr, the essays of Lord Macaulay, the reviews of Sir George Cornewall ILewisI and the ...

VARIETIES

... lust f or mammon are not what they do adore, Never will be-that is more. England wants more careful ruling, tired of its lote Whig schooling, Once it was their land of Goshen, but we hope will be no more, Quite a land of milk and honey, and of other people's ...