ENGLISH LIBERALS AND IRISH NATIONALISTS
... retained in office .gainst the wish of the predominant partner' the sui.p-rt of Mr l)'C ...
... retained in office .gainst the wish of the predominant partner' the sui.p-rt of Mr l)'C ...
... Unionist forgeries and boa lodgings in Stephen's green Division Hut the writer's patriotic soul wrung by the infamy inviting the Whig'' Mr. Diilon to speak on behalf ot the Parnellite candidate in St Stephen's green Division with the object of uniting a'l sections ...
... exquisite, the old phrase went, a thorough aristocrat the high and kindly school. He was consistent; entered life a Whig, lived a Whig, died Whig, broke pledge, sailed under false colour*. Above all was unrivalled the art of managing a constituency. was at ...
... of Tlnse who remember hia,' the writer, and who re member old t» will recognise that was about the hit* uiiple of the old Whig, dry, hatf-baluatli never mistake-making style. Itawi»i said of Lord John Russell that hem* lon({ enough in finding a word ...
... it had right to p d'tically e*jdoitel tha ; | 1 thit >J| R cotitr .'s. Y ■!. this contemptibly leader founds Us ' to the Whigs, as the contents 11 has it*, friend y word iti for the all but essful antit)r, ngo d f Stephen's green, but rather .ieter;nin ...
... '95 ? All during that time the country was represents'! being in stat« horrid suspense waiting for the opportunity to out Whigs who had sold the pass, and the n.no were to sweep the country. The names the traitors weie given dv t-r day, arid with the ...
... says hi. Whig, is mere assumption, and can, we beueve, contradicted wellknown facts. Evidently connei tion >vith the Whig knows more of her Majesty's mmd than 'lie for York, e''en though aristocrat. It not to thought, however, that the Whig inesns any ...
... some serious consequences with regard the rela'ioiu between the two sections the Unionist Party in the North. Here the Belfast Whig'* latest pronouncement the Orange attempt to get agitation the measure— Tn talk certain Tories and Orangemen in Ireland having ...
... Land ' Courts during the past years would have ' convinced even the JS'orlhei a Whig that his 1 lordship's estimate of landlordism was not overdrawn or exaggerated. 'i'he 1 Whig lias nothing but sneer for Lister 1 Tee ants' fence Association sad con- ' expression ...
... and Tory member Lancaster. Sir John Gladstone to that saction rhe Tory Party whose leader «» Cunning. hsd been originally Whig, but followed Portland and into the Tory camp. Unlike many of the secessionists, however, he retained of his o d belief trie ...
... gave them birth (hear, hear). And early W Tons pub* ,r tua*. famous pamphlet entitled Vr/u- • behalf the Irie'i Cat'i-li - | Whig.'' wbi li * 1' - - I with hie pau»phi»t-, pus tun; a- 1 ;■ t - I sal •'•t4SI tic ** Jonathan Swift. That pamphlet the beginning ...
... failed a gentleman farmer, and prescribed and compounded rhubarb pills for his humbler neighbours. Another e>tiuute >t the great Whig bv a biographer Pitt would have attracted attention ; but Lord Rose preferred disappoint expectations. Mi. J •! Farrell's letter ...