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Morning Chronicle

MR. ROEBUCK'S HISTORY OF THE WHIGS

... the first two volumes of a work which will command the instant attention of the public. He entitles it The History of the Whig Ministry of 1830 to the passing of the Re- form Bill. In his preface Mr. Roebuck states that 3the remaining portion of his ...

THE MIRROR OF FASHION

... whole body of the now calumniated Whigs, faithful to the principles of the Rlev'olution, were again in a manner instinctively at their posts; and Lord Ersskitie, then at the bar, was requested, or rather urged by every Whig in England, to give up his lucra- ...

LITERATURE

... unpopular reminiscences of the Whig party nom. passed into oblivion, and his authority descended ito. to the new chieftain, i and s With better quie, 3 and Better opinion, better Confirmation. And from that day forward the Whigs began slowly, but steadily ...

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 ...

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 ...

LITERATURE

... represent the Whigs of 1688, and the Whigs of to-day the Tories ef that day. A very unsupportable paradox it is, based upon a jumble of names, and eked out by sophisms, to prove nothing, after all, but a certain use and collocation of words. The Whigs of 1688 ...

LITERATURE

... tthe villain of the book, a baronet high in pa a tavour with the Whig ministry of the day, and consequently ha 8 (according to our author) a prodigious rascal. The Rev, ret rMr. Croxall, a Whig clergyman, of very accommodating on i morale', arid endowe. -with ...

A POLITICAL LITANY FOR JUNE 1828

... hopefully looks To be its ' Great Statesman despite all rebukes, Libera nos, &C. From a Chancellor born and brought Vp as a Whig, Who for his old principles don't care a fig: Who laughs in his sleeve, as merry as a grig, And who looks very wise, altbougb ...

THE LORD CHAMBERLAIN AND THE MINOR THEATRES

... monopoly is the principle-thedarlirg principle of Toryism. And yet his Grace o1 Devonshire, the Whig Colleague of a V1hig Ministry-the Whig Chamberlain of a Whig Monarch, has become the aider, abettor, supporter and champion of this very principle of mo ...

LITERATURE

... author of what would now be called a Liberal policy I t is necessarily a Whig. And here it is that we join Ii .1 issue with him. We deny that the radical distinc- a tion between Whigs and Tories is to be found in c D the character of their policy. This, ...