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POLICE v. PUBLIC

... of course, The testimony of the force; And those who dare his wolrd dispute, A swinging sentence shall make niite. The Whigs are helping in our game, And Chamberlain will do the same. His speech with high disdain I note; I know lie will ?? stay to ...

MR. WALPOLE'S HISTORY OF ENGLAND

... Crimean WVar in i 856. The considerations which have led him to choose these dates are not hard to discover. The fall of the Whig Ministry in the year i84i marked the lowest ebb of that tide of energy which had reached :its flood-mark in the year i832- ...

NEW BOOKS

... what services it rendered to commerce and the State. The Bank of England, as everybody knows, was originally contrived by the Whig Ministers of William III. in order to find the money needed for fighting Louis XIV. It was an object of detestation to the ...

MUSIC

... smacks rather of the ?? than of the present-day Republican. The first page is devoted to an argumentative article, headed Whigs and Tories. M. Raoul Duval speaks of a mon- arohical restoration as a chimera, which cannot be regarded as within the range ...

THE DUC DE BROGLIE'S RECOLLECTIONS

... English readers was his deep interest in and intense admiration tor every, thing British. He was indeed a very typical English Whig, with a broad love of justice and fair play in the abstract, tempered by a very, posttivi distrust of the people in the concrete ...

BACK AGAIN!

... ex-centrical, S surely, For has he not faith in the new Table Round? Then Goschen, a miniature kind of Colossus, 'Twixt Tory and Whig rather shakily strides. Mr. Speaker, how long will they pitch us and toss us 'Twixt so many parties, such various sides? F ...

THE READER

... VolS.: Chapman and Hall). Colonel Russell's work does nothing to detract from the sympathetic interest which readers of the Whig historian must feel for the great Marlborough's contem- porary rival in fame. His methods of outwitting the Duke of Anjou's ...

Published: Saturday 23 April 1887
Newspaper: Graphic
County: London, England
Type: Article | Words: 2203 | Page: 29 | Tags: Arts & Popular Culture 

THE DEMOCRATIC SHOW; OR, THE WORLD WE LIVE IN

... professors who live on the misappro- priated endowments of the Universities of Oxfo-d and Cambridge have been interviewing the Whig, Lord Hcirticcgton, for the purpose of expressing their con- gratulaptions on his attitude as to the Irish question. This brings ...

REVIEWS OF BOOKS

... Chancellor; but it was during the illness of the King in 1768, and in the Cbancellor's intrigues with the Prinre of Wales and the Whig leaders, which he engaged in for the purpose of securing to himself his hold of the seals, that we meet with as amusiug al ...

REVIEWS FOR MARCH

... of Magyarizing all people within the frontier. Lord Selborne, in an article on The Radical Programme,' shortly states the Whig position, and is followed by Professor Alfred Marshall with a paper on Remedies for Fluctuations of General Prices. He suggests ...

THE DEMOCRATIC SHOW; OR, THE WORLD WE LIVE IN

... turned the poor man's head, that ho now looks upon the democracy with contempt, and publicly de- clares that the Tories and the Whig dislentients are the only English gentlemen. What better could be expected from a man who, through all the times of depression ...

THE DEMOCRATIC SHOW; OR, THE WORLD WE LIVE IN

... urn thle winiter alon1ths. Oh- ~ h~le nthe paymnict of members. D~I-iislieoi of Cheshire mus05 be won lit' tile death of tile Whig coercion-~ Ir\ ciili, 1111 It Ct the least olection dhe. ii1,s occuirredl. If a otrlono hill II is I-l1t, alter thle oxjorioeoc ...