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Poor Man's Guardian

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Poor Man's Guardian

REFLECTIONS

... REFLECTIO NS On hearing that the Whig'! goverynent bad again fastened its destroying fan s upon WILLIAN LOVETT, because hie took a walk with his riends on the Farce day. All men are fond of proverbs-foud of rules; But then they suit their fancy ...

NOTICES OF BOOKS

... perfectly clear. Ihe commons are now strong . they will and must demand. The lords will and must refuse. To suppose that even the whig and new made lords, if such there be, will not resist the very first demands of the people, would be to show an utter ignorance ...

THE POOR MAN'S NOTE BOOK

... if fthej bill whiich 'h-spasie6d shoua sedutreus-this, I'shallhoe satisfied; hbt i lolnly say, I have seen enough, both of Whigs and Tories, togive to neither my unbounded confidence. Wbat are we to tbink of a Whiggovein- ment wlioh, could ,grant -IOQ ...

THE WEAVER'S SONG

... it made vast professions of liberality, and consideration for the ignorant; and all the world, save only those who knew what whig principles really were, believed that the time was come when the working man would have an opportunity of really understanding ...

NOTICE OF BOOKS

... religious enthusiasts enlightened, and the world regenerated I SIMPLE HOBHOUSE. At a public dinner recently given him at Bath, this Whig patrioet is reported to have said- I know it is objected to me that I do not go far enough; but 4 have no idea of the meaning ...

REVIEW OF BOOKS

... some reformers who contemplate moral and social cban es as much beyond whet you desire, as what you desire is beyond what the Whigs are disposed to yield. These sentiments are the more valuable and the more forcible, as they are not written for the present ...

WONDERFUL PROJECT FOR BLACKBURN TOWN

... storm; One to look blue and one to look brown- What a beautiful project for Blackburn towni! One for the Tories and one for the Whigs, One to fill holes which the other one digs: Onefor, one against, all good measures to vote, And to try, as it happens, both ...

POETRY

... wrong, for we're all flesh and blood, And somehow or other 'tis now understood. The four years' destruction by neck-aad-neck Whigs, Have made all the people as stubborn as pigs; In vain we say Try us -for truly they know That not a step farther reform-work ...

A PARSON'S SONG

... wealth it inherits, If this man's not exalted the way he most merits. Yet, say what you please, &c. The Noble Lord, once a Whig, now an ultra-Tory, had no. thing to talk about but his long line ' of ancestry. Sceocn CiurtcatEs.-Sir John Campbell is ...