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TO THE PEOPLE OF ENGLAND

... That is, oech foreign quarter paid Five shillings and nine pence, To takie the Msean of all the years To '28 from hence. Thle Whigs pretend that's far too muoh, Aisd sncakes bread very dear; And so they wvill the tax i/lcreaso, Andfse it for each year. The ...

LITERATURE

... happy to see that hie is as tired of whlat has been called the J'Vktig-Radical Union as ourselves. He says- In what has the Whig-Radical union-if union it may be called-profited thle cause of reforro in the past session? That is the present question. Ilas ...

POETRY

... to gain 'Tis the cause of our qtucen, our children, and homes, Then awake ! true Reformers I to conquest again I Mark the 'Whigs and the Tories, how they deceive ye, And tempt ye to barter your freedom for gold I But stand to your country, reject their ...

POETRY

... are the method and manner, in which the articles are written, ?? wve assert are very ex- cellent. The Monthly Chronicle is a Whig periodical. Tlhis is horrible ; and it would lie a sufficient excuse wvith us, unless there was something particularly excellent ...

LITERARY NOTICES

... sbsO'1 conclusively how deep a de;t moderni En'land was to Ite Whigs; nobody doubts thavtmoderiate andcautious progre-ss within the lines of the constitution is erlsoutlyh doeirabl' That the Whigs desire this, work for tis, tod bhae ?? achieved this -and something ...

FESTIVITIES AT HURST

... course were adopted,'tlre result must be favour- able (applause). Let them not forget that ?? Whigs, or rather ttre Whigs and Mongrels united, and calling ?? Whigs, I ihad the impudence to assume to themselves the power of return- ing the two Mlembers for ...

PARLIAMENTARY POEMS FOR INFANT MINDS

... vearied frox the favourite origincals, ` atd respectfujly desticated to the dfamras of England. ?? NATURAL HIOSTORY. J The Whig must como when he is called, The Tory walk away, w The Palmerston is slightly bald, d The Wood admires the Grey. w The Aberdeen's ...

LITERATURE

... Crow;; aind thle Peers bear them, possess more lower to effe-ct imiprovemenwt than thle Whigs, thee are probably qunite as well inctlned. Every'.admninistration, Whig, 'l'ory, or Rtadical, musut desire popularity-anid there are but two ways of attainiiig ...

TO OUR COUNTRY COUSINS

... lights, and St. Paul's, And gamblers caught by Mr. Halls ? The Paper. What is't narrates full many a story Of Mr. Speaker, Whig, and Tory, And heroes all agog for glory? ?? Paper.. What is it gives the price of Stocks, Of Poyais Loans, and patent locks ...

THE POLITICAL JOHN GILPIN

... main; a And up he kept himself awhile, But soon came down again. t AAway went Bentinck, neck or nought, 'Gainst every timid Whig; n They little dreamt when he set out n He would run such a rig. Some Irish members cheer'd him on; s Protectionists and all ...

LITERATURE

... conduct, is one of them, and must participate in their repute. We rejoice in the palpable evidences of evil-mindedness the Whigs have exhibited. Junius has well said, that we owe it to the bounty of Providenee that the depravity of the heart is sometimes ...

DISTORICAL PICTURES

... Banbridge, the Accountant, had fraudulently concealed 4tl,001., and Col. Barre dismissed them both from office. Burke, the glowing Whig Reformer, upon his accession to office as Paymaster of the Forces, restored both these min to office, though Lord Kenyon had ...