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... A Nut for the Tories to Crack. The Whigs have many faults, The Tories have but two, There's nothing good they say, There's nothing right they do Richards for ever! ...
... A Nut for the Tories to Crack. The Whigs have many faults, The Tories have but two, There's nothing good they say, There's nothing right they do Richards for ever! ...
... the Whigs, after spending his life in exposing and denouncing the cruelty and villany of that party, &c., lls.; expenses incurred through Whig violence and brutality—glazing windows, repairing shut- ters and door, and paid for table broken by Whig rioters ...
... town have accepted retainers from the Conservative Candidate. But what proof, I ask, is this ? Tradesmen sell their wares to Whig and Tory alike but they give their votes to the party they believe in. Why should our lawyers not do the same ? Their legal ...
... together in politics. It is considered fair influence with no harm done, as of course there are many large landowners on the Whig side, and the tenants of one man are counter-balanced by the tenants of his neighbour. In this county all tenants are counter- ...
... bom on March 29, 1793, was educated at Eton, and in 1821 entered Parliament as mem- ber for Stockbridge. Belonging to an old Whig family, he took part at first in the passing of many Liberal measures. In 1824 he delivered his maiden speech, and at once ...
... must be aware there were many which were inevitable, and some which were unavoidable. (Laughter.) The old dishes of the old Whigs got served up whenever a Liberal ministry came in; bat there were not so many after all, and they must remember this, that ...
... letter-writing for the future. The story of the burnt Bible is on a par with another assertion of Mr •JONES'S, that neither Whig nor Tory landlords have ever injured the people. A man who believes the former may probably believe the latter. Another letter ...
... keeping aloof from the old Whig party. The alliance may seem natural enough to the Tories, whose maxim it is to become all things to all men, if by any means they may gain something, but we rather suspect that the old Whig party will not be so easily ...
... which will pre- vent men from ruining themselves by having rescource to legal proceedings, so that in the end we shall all, Whig and Tory, embrace each other and say, Brother, bi other, we are both in the wrong, and we need not dispute about the matter ...
... neglect. I presume the writer knows that when Mr Mainwaring met with the accident, Mr Williams was praised both by Tories and Whigs for his Chi- valrous conduct' in at once stopping his can- vass yet the Imperial Review says Chivalry is, as we know, out of ...
... cockatoo Why is a bald head likn on bright and shining place where H .Because it is a dying. Or (according to Lord DeX }8 are no whigs there. ^ecause there When does a sculptor die a horrid death? When he makes faces and busts. Why was Goliah surprised when ...
... everywhere: so we are not surprised to see in the Carnarvon Herald that a Hope, a perfumer, announces himself as a Whig maker As if whigs' had not gone out, never to return, when Mr Gladstone became premier! We might as soon expect old Toryism to become ...