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Poetry

... dodging, - 'ii Govertiment ?? gets the boird, The paupers only get the lodging.- . * Bsotis we hereby all agree .Kith brue, Whig unanoimit, We're very grieved tobe, we're sure, ct such expense to stsp the poor, ;tiutbeg to state (if 'tisn;i nonsense) ...

Poetry

... Cried, ' 'They'e riot worth ad-n John Russell isjp poor, poor prig, With scarce a dri'am o' brain '[ihesmallestsmn ple of a whig 'The parliament can contain. 1 Ialtry in verse, and poor in prose, He set to guide the House! As soon I'd give a team of cats ...

SONG

... tiful spot. cronus. Yet England's a country whose face is de- lightful; We ne'er see its equal wherever we roam: Though vile Whigs and Tories have made it so frightful, We ne'er can forget that it once was our home. There's the Churth, with its Bishops, ...

Original

... 'we must turn them out. -First came a false and faithless Whig, Whom all trie Whigs abandon, .-A thing as changeful as the Times, Well nicknamed shuffling Sandon; Ten years a Tory,-two a Whig, -As either was the fashion,- -But never what a mean should ...

SHERIDAN

... seemed to indicate that his political career was at an end. The new leader of the Whig party was not the man to sympathize with Sheridan as Fox had done. The new ally of the Whig party, Lord Grenville, was still less so. Sheridan, indeed, had the Prince of ...

Poetry

... Queen; And every trce comes peeping forth, In robes of emterald itreen; Tie biris with mnsic til the nir, Joy trembling on their whig; All N;aturesttilo: so sweet-so fair- So lovely is the Striltg. ...

POETRY

... base anrd 'mean; Veels andassertl hiscountly'sglor ?? And rails at treacherous Whig or Tory;. ilenemer what you we'e yourself So'me twenty years ago; * You truckled not to Whig or Guelph, You boldly.railed at'I'ory.pelf, 'And felt for England's woe: 'Tho' ...

POETRY

... That wrings the wretched people's on thy i letested race shall fall; backs: Millions shall steal from wood and Thou, with Whigs and Kings com- glen, bined, Ferocious ,Wild,bhlood-thirsty men. Hast ruined and enslaved mankind, peasants and labourers shall ...

THE CANDIDATE'S ADDRESS TO HIS CONSTITUENCY

... Pranier thwarted_ Ad Both Whigs and Tosics have I served, And both have I suppofted. Nevcr have I with factious vote Opposed ill' Administration Grey, Melbourne, Peel, nre all alike, o Thle servants of the nation. f Aand how the Whigs rewarded me, Just now ...

THE FOLLOWING CHEERING SONG IS TO BE SAID OR SUNG AT ALL TORY FEEDS DURING THE RECESS

... knife they glory, Nor is Shaw of O'Connell less lauda- Tory. King Oastler is free, by his late discharge, To rail at the Whigs and the laws at large. He seems in the mass (not high mass) to glory, And in making his subjects contribu- Tory. Rise, Maidstene ...

THE LIFE OF LORD SHELBURNE.*

... never to have forgiven his master for the part which he played on this occasion. The Ministry was made up of Chathamites, Whigs, and King's friends, and on Shelburne fell the whole labour of maintaining the influence of the first: The representative ...