Poetry

... IN )Y ~BTA BITt,8WL Ol F.gZandfor ever ?? ?? tihe ator eCarter, thy nrinciples ne~vr. shall founder, ,Xhough the dasti y Whigs.may49e8tro th.beat Ifen';Ogress of truth shall make. despots knock TheV Pr uenldealy around thee, again and again ! ¶hat though ...

Poetry

... TPRISONERi.) .Ar, Ol Epglrnad ?? aver h6lt wiaihi the MOMJn_ The Charted rf thy imtieis nvier shall founder, Though the dastaly Whigs may destroy thy best ,men; The progress of truth shall make despots knook under: te Well1 rally around thee, aain and again ...

LITERARY EXTRACTS

... Insurgenin teo mercifully. AnidLauderdaletold Charles, with anoatb, tbat the duke had been so civil to the Whigs because he was himself a Whig In his heart. This made 'it a, court word; and, in a little while, all the friends and followers of the duke ...

JOHN BULL'S DILEMMA; AND HOW IT ENDED

... to the door, he Sent in a hudthfor Doctor Tory. The Doctor yame, and when duly fee'd Told John his case meas bad indeed; 4' Whig's Russewd PuRGl, ^ quoth he, with a laugh, Has made your nerves too strong by hair: Like a miser hamper'd by too much wealth ...

THAT GRAND OLD MAN!

... couldn't ake out what it all was about- Any more than the Grand Old Man, Ho, ho ! Any mtore thaty thr Grand Old Nan. Then the Whigs took it up and moved stumping abroad, In a terrible fuss to maintain Tbst the great Manifesto was what they adored, Whilst ...

LITERATURE

... truth there is in its caustic portraitures of whigs dead and living, but also much of the peon- liar view that Lord Brougham's feelings tempt him now to take of them. An entirely reliable estimate of the whigs as a party, and of the surviving members of ...

LITERATURE

... tone in the present' ninber is far from being snbdired. We extract the ?? very just obser- vations with reference to thei Whi,g administration, and 'the probable condact of- the' -Tories should they be permitted to resume.: the reins' of gdverhmrnet, ...

TOWN AND TABLE TALK ON LITERATURE, ART, &c

... rather have seen Mrs. Fletcher in a box at a theatre than have seen Mrs. Siddons on the stage of the same theatre. She was a Whig, and long a widlow. She i married for love of. what marriage is said seldom to give-liberty. Her husband, Archisiald Fletcher ...

LORD RUSSELL.*

... from i8x9 to I826 the Whigs did not touch the Reform question, quite overlooking his own great speech in I822. The mistake of the reviewer, however, if any at all, was in the implied statement that in i8i9 and in 1826 the Whigs did adopt the question ...

SONG

... ?? And privilege siffers a gross uiiminution, th For nothing is safe tram these Wiigs, - he 5 I r These Whigs; Cli 0. nothing is sacred from Whigs I tb They ruired the landlords through Peel, .ha And Tbrcugh Peel - * And they' ipdered the farmers a-de ...

MINISTERIAL MUSIC

... ruthless hand, unveiled AU our tricks from first to last. That party, which awhile ours clouded, Shines forth with purer ray, But Whigs, alas, in darkness shrouded, Will ne'er see a brighter day, We knew the nation long had meant them To wrest from our hands ...

If Sir Robert Peel has asy bowels of cmw, for his own legislative measures, he will forward the Corn and

... after the election followed the recall of Peel from Rome at nflwd speed, summoned by a Hudson, how his lordship overwhelmed the Whig Lords by his protection. With a like benevolence he now gathera the unfortunate government beneath the umbrageous shelter of ...