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... the spectacls presented yesterday in the Guildhall Court we may well refuse to accept the eloquent apostrophe of the great Whig orator. ...
... the spectacls presented yesterday in the Guildhall Court we may well refuse to accept the eloquent apostrophe of the great Whig orator. ...
... asked where were the Whigs ? Yet four or five years ago he boasted that be was the only lIving man who had preserved the Whig traditions in act and in their pristine purity. lie (Mr Chamberlain) feared that the last of the Whigs was still stewing in ...
... decade of the 17th century and the early part of the 13th century were both of then, supporters of the Stuarts, whille the Whigs during the saute periods were, first, the sup. porters of the Pa rliamentaias party, next of WVilliam Prince of Orange. and ...
... referred to the chief of them. Assuming that the Session goes on to a peaceful end, two attempts are to be made to dish the Whigs. That, we may say, is the, only policy the Tories have had since Disraeli. It was Mr Disraeli who first con- vinced the Tory ...
... Parliament. Such is the natural effect of the House of Commons being broken up into several contingents not under the thumb of Whigs and Tories. The Church in France is a standing difficulty with all Ministries; the Labour question threatens to become the ...
... but they were from 1648 to 174I5, and it may be well for Unionists to remember that Parliaments were made eeptennial by a Whig minister, because if the Tories had- returned to power they would have endeavoured to upset the present dynasty. There are ...
... announced that five orA six years ago Sir William was proclaiming i that he was the only surviving Whig, and o now Mr. Chamberlain pointed to this old- i original Whig steeped in Parnellite juice. V The effect of this was electrical. The recur- ring cheers ...
... lution vsas unanirously passed in favour of making an p.inest- a test question at the general election, and dedaring that no Whig or Tory should receive support tiniless'he pledged himself to support an amnesty. . . M.-.GLASTxoz ov OLD-AEa PI Tnsr6s.-Mr ...
... a strong reforming i, Government. i T The well-meant tinkering with great questions C e characteristic of the present Tory-Whig-Unionist I a amalgamation is totally inadequate to the times, b r- and the unholy coalition ?? give way to better1 a men. Will ...
... a paid lecturer in defence ofE a n anachronism as effete as the House of Lords. There is Mr. Corn- wallis West, a Coercion Whig, with a much be-photographed wife. There is Mr. Balfour, the man who published a treatise advocating doubt in the matter of ...
... only living man who was a representative of the Whigs, and appealed to the shades of Fox and BURKE and RUSSEL. I am afraid> said Mr. ( CHAMBERLAIN, As he finished his castigation, that the last of the Whigs is still stewing in Parnellite juice, and the ...
... ' 7.4:5 St. Jams'3s, Ludy V imitlerlicre's F1iii.'' GA.3: Savoy, ''he Vicar o;f 33 o,''v 0.50, Straw: nc, Nlire Nv'ic Whig, 8.40; 'eI oi'S. 'T''the T'imnes, 8; '1'aerd'S, ?? 'Walker, Lolle ?? 8: Moo' andul BurgesS Muiwtrled,, 8; JEgyptia,, , H::ll ...