THE GATHERING OF THE MAHONYS
... is the samie as, Oh yvou roguc, ' used sportivclv. If Wn w11l Nvishes to Call allother a rogflue ,;eliousli, he cals hillm Whig-fte terms being convertible, ...
... is the samie as, Oh yvou roguc, ' used sportivclv. If Wn w11l Nvishes to Call allother a rogflue ,;eliousli, he cals hillm Whig-fte terms being convertible, ...
... tionoften find it d~ifficultto graspandrcalise to them. selves 'the scenes and character which it describes. But -n infusion of Whig and Tory, of Church and Chapel, or of Manchester and Oxford, supplies just the avour and consistency which they require. Such ...
... to expect a pro- W'duction as thoroughly Tory as Macaulay's| he | account of the monarch's reign is uncom- In- promisingly Whig. In this respect, how- Irs ever, Mr Traili's work presents a very: elstriking contrast to that of the der writer, 2o1an is ...
... stanes spinnan. Wi' a vhii 'l and a Cllre)e tin they sit roaLn' tier tce. Then hurrah ! c. It's anl uneclilie story ?? beith Whig snd Tory Mlann ayc collyshaugy like dogs osre a bane; And a' denominactions ore seantin' in paticece, For na4l Kirk irillthole ...
... exer. tions for the regeneration of Italy-always the en. ?? hope of his life-procured him the intimacy and regard of the great Whig politicians of the day; and, though strongly opposed to the more violent Italian party, with whomhe always refused toscthis ...
... weakness for check- ing the flow of his story by heaving huge blocks of history into it. Pages are filled with the squabbles of Whigs and Tories, and whole chap- ters are devoted to the intrigues of the French Court The Duke of Marlborough figures pro- minently ...
... look at tiie result of the last elections. It will be remembered that when the Whigs and the unenfranchised fought together, they drove the Tories from power. When the Whigs assumed office, and turned their backs cn their old allies —the people—from that ...
... rather see the old Tory system revived to that which he contemplates so complacently. We will be called Tory Radicals by the Whigs for so doing; and even some Chartists may think we go too far.” Let such weigh our reasons. There is no disguise so secure ...
... insulted, despised, oppressed, taxed, People England, Scotland, and Ireland, look at this ye toil-worn worshippers of the Whig finality school; ye Conservative Operatives, who raise your sweet voices in joyous acclamation for the glorious constitution ...
... or in the cultivating of sour kiout. The Whigs, whose habit it long has been ft.r to the time of the »hat time carried the doctnr such an extent as even to derton, to be hanged, for ha right; and we are su Whigs, of the present day, r„.renitor» said, nor ...
... staved in, And the roarin' ad din As wu march up and do= r Things In bad, . I!'v beerd Wl' ?? w'd Constitooi n Sin' the Whigs mae a leak fn'l It's ?? and weken't, And sbout dissolutien. But this beatbOD Woiw; Gie 'n ma t. Idxnk S Beckon I'11 emigrate- ...
... fifteen hundred thousand, prior to the glorious revolution; this would have been liquidated at the end of the war, but the Whigs, who basked in the royal smiles ’of the unwieldy Dutchman, discovered by this time that they could save the pockets of the ...