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ourselves mistaken . When a body breaks to pieces , and the parts fly off in contrary directions * there must have been a previous tendency of each part to move in the direction in which it is impelled the moment it is set at liberty . It is evident that one portion of the Ministry must have been worse , and another portion must have been better , than their collective conduct .
The Ministry will now have a new base of popularity , Tf they so please , all past errors will be considered as cancelled , and in two months from this time they may have acquired a new character . If their future conduct show vigour of purpose and a strong spirit of improvement , all that they have done ill , will be imputed to Mr . Stanley and Sir James Graham ; all that they have done well , to themselves . From us , and we believe from all the enlightened reformers , they may expect , until they shall have had a fair trial , not only no hostility , but the most friendly encouragement and support . They must now throw themselves upon the people * All their strength is there ; and it will not fail them . The names which are talked of to replace the retiring Members of the Cabinet , are of good augury . In Lord Durham and Sir Henry Parnell , the ministry will have two men more devoted to popular objects , than almost any other public men not decidedly numbered among radicals ; and in Mr . Aoercromby , one of the most upright , strongminded , and unprejudiced of the members of the old opposition , and one
who is thoroughly alive to the spirit of the times . The change is a decided progress of the Movement , and will carry all the great public questions several steps in advance . But what is more important perhaps than even the change itself , is the immediate cause of it ; the general expectation that Mr . Ward ' s resolution for reducing the Temporalities of the Irish Church , would have passed the House of Commons , even in opposition to the Ministry . It is well understood that this was what determined the retirement of the more Conservative
section of the Ministry .
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456 Notes en the Newspapers .
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A .
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Citation
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Monthly Repository (1806-1838) and Unitarian Chronicle (1832-1833), June 2, 1834, page 456, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/mruc/issues/vm2-ncseproduct2634/page/74/
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