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A CRY FOR A CRY

... netel ye but shout that the W'higs are oit Asre the grand gutde tian laid by ? \W'tat hinders ye raise the countrv-side With the cry that should aise it best, That tip in the tree is the wicked Tory, And has raxit the Whig fra the nest? -Now haud ye your ...

Magazines

... advantage of calling yourself a Liberal. I'he Root of our Misfortunes, according to Mr. Austit, is the abnormal union of Whigs and Radicals.-Mr. Leopold Katscher's paper on Some Aspects of the Salvation Artimy is excellent reading. It is singularly ...

Published: Saturday 14 March 1885
Newspaper: Graphic
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 932 | Page: 12 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture 

STEPHEN'S NUNCOMAR AND IMPEY.*

... legal rigour. Tested by this Sir James Stephen is forced to pronounce-in spite of his affectionate admiration for the great Whig historian-that Macaulay has unconsciously committed a deep and irreparable injustice. As might be expected, the arguments in ...

PLAYS WITH A PURPOSE

... which the Whigs induced the author to produce in the closing days of Anne, in the hope, says Macaulsy, that the public would discover some analogy between the followers of Cxesar and the Tories, between Sempronius and the apostate Whigs, between Cato ...

Published: Saturday 18 July 1885
Newspaper: The Era
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 1707 | Page: 7 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture 

THE ASS OF BURIDANUS

... acd revolving hands, Pxprossive of the restless spirit vexed Byseason's cuhlce in a woxnd perplext, To be, orut to ?? or Whig, . dfe-lo b4 tor philosophio pmig. BJ£We- table, amply spread with sueak He fmshes-ki doubt-*hat he shiJ eat. Let guests u ...

HARROW SCHOOL.*

... he would certainly have succeeded. The Governors had different views; Parr had committed the unpardonable offence of being a Whig, and his rival was preferred. The result was a seces- sion to the neighbouringvillageof Stanmore, where he founded aschool ...

THE DEMOCRATIC SHOW; OR, THE WORLD WE LIVE IN

... IF the Liberals have won in the counties, it has been through Mr. Chamberlain9's prograimme. That old crazy faction, the Whigs, will now doubtless come forwaird, ndl, as usual, endeavour calmly to clani the credit to themselves for the Radical victory ...

Magazines

... ably and thoughtfully before the reader the reasons which induce him and many more Liberals to dissyeiate themselves from the Whig-Radical Coalition. He is an old-thile Liberal, and cannot away with the departure from carlinal Liberal principles which is ...

Published: Saturday 10 October 1885
Newspaper: Graphic
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 1318 | Page: 8 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture 

THE REVIEWS FOR MARCH

... for fair trade, and, finally, Mr. Austin's own paper on l The Root of our Mis- fortunes, which he finds in the presence of Whigs and Radicals in the same Cabinet and the same party. As for the remedy, Mr. Austin appeals to Mr. Goschen (and Mr. Forster ...

TWO NOVELS.*

... wealth, and whose feeling towards less fortunate individuals is asurvival of thatwhich was common among the duller sort of Whig politicians in I840 or there- about. Fayr Madoc's programme, in short, is too ambitious. Were she another Goethe she would ...

THE REVIEWS FOR MARCH

... for fair trade, and, finally, Mr. Austin's own paper on sThe Root of our Mis- fortunes, which he finds in the presence of Whigs and Radicals in the same Cabinet and the same party. As for the remedy, Mr. Austin appeals to Mr. Goschen (and AMr. Forster ...

THE READER

... politics of fifty years atgo. Runnymede's unstatesmanlike hatred of O'Connell and the Irish colours the whole volume; the \Whigs (he says) aim at destroying the Tories, the Radicals the Constitution, the Repealers the Empire. O'Connell is a crocodile ...

Published: Saturday 25 April 1885
Newspaper: Graphic
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 2180 | Page: 22 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture