THE DAMNABLE BOOK

... sition they take the words 6 Whig gai us~ e by Mr. DEEGAN ,in speaking of the hook, and/,wil. fully misrepresenting them as being intended for a quotation from the bank,' try to make it s5eea'Vnn- likely that 'any Whig would have so written,,., Al this ...

Original

... to carry the day. t We fought for it stoutly, a We I've it devoutly, 'Tis our prile, our protection, our glory: C From the Whigs we obtain'd it, And now that we've gain'd it It shall not be swamp'd by a Tory. * (Chorus.) u Then fiil every glass, S Let ...

ON THE LIBERTY OF THE PRESS

... take coiupo-lo:s, pressmen. devils, ties. What means th:s change! The suzn of ll the story's, 'onres deprest are Whies, and Whigs in p-w'r are Tories. -Newcaeste Courant, November 4, 1732. ...

THE LIFE OF LORD SHELBURNE.*

... we think, calls Chathamite Whigs. The position of this little knot of statesmen between the two main parties in the State corresponds to that occupied by the Peelites after the death of Sir Robert Peel. They were not Whigs and they were not Tories, and ...

Poetry

... amoarp. IK ACROSTIC. L if e, what is it ?-toil and woe; I nfernal Whigs have made it s0; B lood is on their heads; and weeping E yes bedew the sod, where sleeping R ests a victim. Hark I that cry I T is from a voice that cannot die; Y outhful, smiling ...

SONGS OF THE TORIES

... Hastings, Witih Forester, Milton, and Moore, We'll defy the foul lriihman's bastings, And hunt that gaunt wolf from the door. No Whig shall be sufier'd among us, To chat by the gay covert side; No radical sportsmen shall throng us, Or presume in our presence ...

CABINET RESOLUTIONS TO SATISFY THE COUNTRY

... dodging,' 'Tis Goveroment that gets the bnard, The paupers only get the lodging:- Rlesolred, we hereby all agree With true Whig unainiity, We're very grieved te be, we're sure, At such expense to starve the poor, But beg to state (if 'tisn't nonsense) ...

Poetry

... p1oetrp. ACROSTIC. L ife, what is it ?-toil and woe; I nfernal Whigs have made it so; B lood is on their heads; and weeping E yel bedew the sod, where sleeping R ests a victim. Hark! that cry! T 'is fron a voice that cannot die- 1 outhful, smiling, LIBERTY ...

POETRY

... glass of wine; The day brave Lyndhurst's eighty-eight We've won by eighty-nine. Chorus-Then let us toast, &c. ve Repentant Whigs and Tories true Fi Did honestly combine; M The dirty Coalition-crew StU Are licked by eighty-nine. inj St. Martin's Hall may ...

THE GRAND JUNCTION

... Bankels, Legs with Lords, will mate a motley Yet sink that mInordifhrer\ev, ant join to Fglht tire oo.e Caime rally, lads butts Whigs and Rlati, aunt lay the Tories low. We ktnow your small'and eilly tousl, hrov trimming arli hnrv tatme, In all your sims sod ...

Selected Poetry

... heaven sa uble, Tahat I mny revt i and sport like you, IT) tilt kllady spor's of tha tight. C'Ouit Jo.Ornar l. LAMENT FOR THE 'WHIGS. The last link hatl; brokLen, the vision is o'er, For their harks ate cast loose on the Treasury shsore T, ey sassy steer %where ...

Literature

... of the citizens with the Whig party had remained unbroken, but there uwere evident symptoms of restiveness on the par. of, the forner. They had no absolute objections to urge against the candidates offered to them by the Whigs, bout they complained that ...