THE WHIGS AND MR GLADSTONE
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... is heaped with broken vows and cathe aud pledgrs frail. And tern we thought of Party, and all aloug o r vac, Say which is Whig or Tory,' was passed frolm lunn io But our spelri ail the leaders, No Unionist is far, But ?? reith every Gladitenite who ...
... his own party or in depreciation of his opponents, deserves jboth respect and roward. The great statesman who described the Whig foreign policy of his time as one of meddle and muddle did as much to discredit his opponents as could have been done by ...
... . He is, of course, aware of the nature of the recent negotia-. tions, and is prepared to go into the same Lobby with the Whigs and Conservatives when t the eventful division occurs, hint he has taken no part in any consultation with a view to joint action ...
... ever- advanciun Liberal. Do 4on recollect forty years agoo and more ,peaking to me thus ?? Scotch Tory is worse ihan an English Whig; a Scotch Whip is worse than an English Radical; and a Scotch Radical worse than the devil himself.' And now, because Scotland ...
... discouraged, if they found tihe Whigs once more deceiving themn. Th2e Irish people were not going to be caun ght in the trap again, and that isplendid orcanisacion which was at present very . quiet, waiting to see what the Whigs would do, would resume action ...
... constituency to return him, and had to find a refuge in Scotland, and to be returned by the aid of Conservative votes there. , The Whigs are not numerically strong *in the House of Commons. They owe their force to a sort of hereditary instinct in intrigue, to ...
... to ?? Hartingionl and be Salisbury respectively-the mneetin:g must ic iasi to hav e ?? prinucipally ci Coneser- 'e.rfes The W~hig leader had unsdouibtedly n1o ama ztocumorlain of his welcome; buit it wsasX my obvious th~at his generous ?? to the.! cerorty ...
... election, which Lem so; ,3 r j has it in. his pnwer to bring rni sca be very serioas to the Nationalist earboter arJ then th e Whigs might be enore to corne to tcrms if they saw an in- -n:; ;. to neit to t1e loss of power. But the S K Mr P~siireL are only ...
... meeting a con- siderable number oF the well-known Whigs and MIoderate Liberals, who are known to be in revolt on the question of a separate Irish Parliament. While on this subject I may mention that the 'Whig and Moderite Liberal cave in the HouseofCommons ...
... of M Ar Lynch, Mr Bigge r and myself de- V ter~nined that in such a position, havin to choose between supporting an odious Whig isjtri'uiet who broke his pledge, s-ho vouild not arc with the ritch party, and an honest Nationalist, that we shouidkeep ' ...
... question she should-live and-die I with Great Britain. He (M r Mundella) had not a word -to saF against the old Whigs. It was the new Whigs that brought the name of t Whip into discredit. He had no intention to r dwell at any length upon the Irish question ...