Reviews

... Beaconsfield. Here woe are tolM vhere atid whoen Disraeli spoko of an organised hypocrisy,' of Sir Robert Peel catching the Whigs bzthingw andl wa!king away with their clothes, of England's dislike to coalitions, of Mr. Horsman being a superior poison ...

REVIEWS OF BOOKS

... at the end of the. veer 'tis all very well. And with thesewordeoheleft the astonishedacrowd as usual. Swift had served the Whig party with his pen, and thinking that he deserved some recomsseuse, thus coolly recommended ?? for a rich prehendarly at West ...

THE READER

... the last half life-time. We admire Sir Archibald's shrewdness more than his word-painting. The way in which he hits off the Whigs everywhere and at all times as a Mutual Admiration Society who always say the same thing, is simply perfect. What would Sydney ...

Published: Saturday 10 February 1883
Newspaper: Graphic
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 2060 | Page: 23 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture 

THE REVIEWS

... secure that end-to enter Into an alliance with the Home Rulers, and to run the County Franchise question so as to dish the Whigs-but the writer spurns the first as diecreditable, and is still too disgusted with the Disraeli Reform Act of 1868 to think ...

PILFERINGS FROM PUNCH

... Wit's bow is strung to slay. Uprouse ye then, my merry, merry men,. It is our op'ning day. Chorus-Uprouse ye then, &c. Both Whigs snd Rads are wide awake, Unclosed are Tory's eyes I The morning papers now will make Less room for fade and lies, Pewilder'd ...

THE MAGAZINES FOR MARCH

... the Whig I position are cleverly hit off. Of the former, the a 14dialogue is better than the' moral. Nothing, in- ,deed, coculd be smarter in its weay than the following '~colloquy between Corlchocaso, the Radical, and Sang- I froid, the Whig, on ...

MR. C. P. VILLIERS'S FREE TRADE SPEECHES.*

... incalculable benefts upomi the 1orl- 1 is pleasant to knew that this neglect Mir. Villiers expemienced at the hfiids of the Whig party was not due to any want of effort on the part of the reformers witlL whom lie had been acting in the anti-corn law camspaign ...

APRIL MAGAZINES

... country to the Queen in support of his principles. In point of fact it was the affair of Dr Sacheverell which turned out #lie Whig Ministry and brought in the Tories under Harley in Nov. 1710. 'HOW TO OBTAIN AUTOGRAPHS. Lovewan s aMagazine, we said last ...

THE REVIEWS

... tofrma pi party broad eniough to embracie Constleioa aibrl no lIon, In other words, we fancy, Lord Dounrean other discontented Whigs will not join the camp unless th, they are perrrittsd to share in its gu-.dance, and in the its spoils Of vICtOry, It further ...

SELECTIONS AND GOSSIP

... M.P. and alderman, delivered himself of some political opin- ions. Those which dealt with the Whigs are most interesting. Mr. Collings considers the Whigs are a hindrance and a drag upon the advanced Radical party. He would rather have three Salisburys ...

MAD JACK HALL OF OTTERBURN

... Forster, a member of P erlia- ment, and a T Mr Fenwick, s ?? uat far off, the one a Whig and the other a Tory, their loud words breathing defiance a- eacl other, Queen Anne's Whig Ministry had obliged her to follow a precedent established by Wlliiam LnUd Mary ...

MAD JACK HALL OF OTTERBURN

... disjointed manner in which it was given, and his words, which seemed to imply that he thought there was no harm in killing a Whig, and that his friend was of the same mind. How Alderman Hutchinson compressed his lips and set his teeth and groaned in spirit ...