THE TORIES' LOT IS NOT A HAPPY ONE

... Answered then the voice of Gosoihen, ij I will cure it, and my notion I Is that-I a Whig, and you r A Tory-I shall pull you through- a We shall be at once Whig-Tory-ous. o Other thoughts, alas! engross I Honest Tories for the loss t Of Randyand of ...

New Books

... events as they occurred, the diffi- culty was naturally multiplied a hundred-fold. That Mr. Walpule could have thrown off his Whig preju- dices and treated many of the topics with which these volame3 deal in a spirit of perfect impartiality could not, from ...

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 ...

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 ...

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- ...

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

... preseint is at aI standstill, ow-lug to the parliatnentary deatiloeck caused by- thle tottitutle of Sir. Chatmberlttin and fthe Whigs. Tier Duchy of Cornarto1 l ppears to its ?? Of the worst manage6d of tto Putblic estates wh~ich go to sweoll itse incomeo of ...

THE POEM OF POEMS

... to rise. 24--Ve inasters grow of all that we despise. t 25-(, then renonince that impious self-esteem: t t 2-'iclie. have whigs, and grandeur is a dream. 27---Tliil not amkbition wise beeause 'tis brave, I 28-Tho 1 pih oif glory leads but to the -rave ...

LITERATURE

... never called to the bar, except ins an honorary a way after he became Prime Mlinister. When he I, left college Canning was a whig of the school ;of Fox and of Sheridan, and Sir Walter Scott 1,Itells a curious story of ?? sudden political con- 1- ;VekSfiQ1 ...

LITERARY NOTES

... General and Solctor. jal lre Irish Tories, the 3 a~corGnr1 of Conatabllary > Wli hl a~t y a~ry, the b ofdthe Dnhhn pole is a Whig, the ceasader of he forces is a German, the ?? (;ve Bord is made up of three English Tory Pro- testants and one Irlsh Tory ...

A POPULAR REVIEW OF POLITICAL AND SOCIAL WORK DURING THE REIGN OF QUEEN VICTORIA, IN TEN CHAPTERS

... the Liberal party, consisting C then mainly of Whigs, mixed with a few Radicals; C composed now of various sections of moderate Liberals, of a large body of Radicals, and a few of the nearly I extinct Whigs. t This brings us to the attempt to define the ...

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