MESSRS. BIGGAR AND PARNELL IN DUBLIN
... Their sentencee were cheered to the echo. Mdr. Dunne remarked that instead of former crouching, sneaking, grovelling, rotten Whigs, they were now represented by two Irishmen. ...
... Their sentencee were cheered to the echo. Mdr. Dunne remarked that instead of former crouching, sneaking, grovelling, rotten Whigs, they were now represented by two Irishmen. ...
... impulsive and 8 more communicative. But they see that, whatever E, may be the arrangements at Devonahire House and li the great Whig mansions, the nation is not at all n likely to accept them, but will insist upon having its old leader back again. Nowhere ...
... fertility of the country. A short time before he had indulged in thle famous phillipic of The base, bratal, stud bloody Whigs, in which he was warrmly n- taken to task by Lord Mfacaulay. A patriotic Irishman TH hen lived in ManchesterEr. G. W. Coady ...
... anything to do with it, though he was aware that the Irish in Great Britain were altogether in favour of it. He said the Whigs understand that they cannot return to power without Irish aid, and when the Home-rule members numbered eighty, Parlia- ment ...
... 3the reveoes were drawn from the domorallsation, by wholesmle drunkenness of the British people- (applause .: so lon~g as the Whig and Tory aristo- cracy end eavoured to keep up the present rotten systtm of wagisteri'w licendeir of the dr-ink traffic inetead ...