THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... of the little troubles and interests of children than of the business of full-grown men. There was a time when intelligent Whigs used to laugh at the fancies of the sixteenth-century politicians, who made up imaginary republics and devised the uniforms ...

Lord Spencer'B speech at tlie Cobden Club Dinner on Saturday was sensible and businesslike ; simple and ..

... his reference to Mr. Gladstone as the chief whose leadership is proud to follow. It showed that saving instinct by which the Whig aristocracy have managed, amid changes which have amounted to little less than a revolution, to preserve themselves and their ...

THE LIBERTY OF THE PRESS AND OF SPEECH

... execute the law to the utmost of its vengeance upon those that are known-and we have reason to remember them-by the name of Whigs! And you are likewise to remember the snivelling trimmers, for you know what our Saviour Jesus Christ says in the Gospel, that ...

LITERARY SELECTIONS

... 1832, he wrote on the same day to the Duke of, Wellington to congratulate him onl the salvation of the Constitution from the Whigs, and to Lord Grey to condole with him on its pending destruction by the Toiries, and enciosed-the letters in the wrougenvolope; ...

REPRESENTATION OF SOUTHWARK

... House of Commons had a strong Liberal —he was going to say Radical— clement, and if it was to be a struggle between the old Whigs and the new Radicals, for his part he thought the new Radicals would win. (Cheers). Mr. W. Williams believed the present House ...

THE LITERARY EXAMINER

... the number of Whig statesmen in the Ministry, ultimately perceives that the measures of the Cabinet have been dictated, not by the Whigs, but by the Radicals, and are dangerous precisely in proportion to their departure from sound Whig principles, a departure ...

UNDER THE SURFACE; OR, FOLLY AND FASHION

... steps. And- what's worse, no end of great people have resigned with him. Weeping awful weeps, I give their names. Oh, ye .Whigs-ye Whigs, how coul1d yeP Moll Flanagan, Illustrious Bottiewasher, Windsor. Jack Stuhb's, Coder Coachmnan, Osborne. Susan Topper ...

LITERATURE

... and reasons shackle; of And they're not all ducks that cackle, i- No, nor only geese that hiss ! ,d Rid of Tories, and of Whigs' ties, .d He should watch the barley swvell, l XHang his nice old head o'er pigstyes, Sentence poachers, hunt a spell :0 Judge ...

MAGAZINES FOR AUGUST

... man at once hold and conscientious like elicl Mr Gladstone. We heatr much talk of ai new cave. -wor Suppose some alarmed -Whig landowners did or dlo form feel a cave, what would come of that ? We knosv what a at came of the cave fornied in 1866, uinder ...

UNDER THE SURFACE; OR, FOLLY AND FASHION

... AUGUST, 189. ' Dear me, dear me ! said Hartington, wringing his hands, and crying into a big bucket, what shall we do? If we Whigs hadn't been such a set of infernal noodles, we might hare helped him with his work a Instead of throwing up a kind of barricade ...

THE DUKE'S CHILDREN

... rapturous pleasures of parliamnentary debate. This kind of thing, indeed, soon proved too much for the young hope of the great Whig house ; and when the Duke and Mr. Monk come in again, Lord Silverbridge refuses to cross the floor of the house with Sir Timothy ...

THE MAGAZINES

... prevent- ! aic.ulnes and waun or tact in ?? rt of them and though , ?''.strange dings from a congerles I cnn! wr;a i'i includes Whig maguates s i ?? lri tail, Lort Selbournie and Mir ? dtgo c nlrchlmen and earnest DLe- a i-;e ,s lrtl surprised that thin's ...