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78 THE TOMAHA WK. [August 22 , 1868.
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ON TRIAL< .—SOME POPULAR CANDIDATES.
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of The the House Commission of Lord appo...
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THE EALL OE TUPPER.
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but We ver are y frail too . often Some ...
Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software. The text has not been manually corrected and should not be relied on to be an accurate representation of the item.
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software. The text has not been manually corrected and should not be relied on to be an accurate representation of the item.
Additionally, when viewing full transcripts, extracted text may not be in the same order as the original document.
78 The Tomaha Wk. [August 22 , 1868.
78 THE TOMAHA WK . [ August 22 , 1868 .
On Trial< .—Some Popular Candidates.
ON TRIAL < . —SOME POPULAR CANDIDATES .
Of The The House Commission Of Lord Appo...
of The the House Commission of Lord appointed s " with to a inquire view to intp its the general existing utility state , evidence & c ., & c , " mi having ght be suspended forthcoming its to labours enable in the order Commissioners that important to yesterday send in their . report in full , the above inquiry was resumed and As the on greatest the previou interest s occasion was , manifested the room was in densel the proceedings y crowded . , The first witness called was MrYawlingsof Finsbury * He
. , new said Parliament he was what . He was was called for a " popular . B candidate / he ' for meant the that universal advancement of progress everybody y progress to the self-same standard of eternal equality , brotherhood , and wealth . He w could ritten not a pa exactl mphlet y exp o lai n the su at bject he , mea to which by thi he s , referred but he h the ad Commissioners . Yes , he intended to go to the hustings as the that " L . P e WX ople ^ interfered B ^ . *^ ' « s J champ VA 1 U 1 A 1 with W / AV ion / A *» . the ' * AA He ^* was * VWV * J the V **^^ ^ determined d V ^><*> *^*» Al t . WVfc hat enemy V 14 he W & 4 meant i T of ^^& all all *¦
abuses . He considered that people there ' s goo were . a B great y many , abuses in Eng Commissioners land . Yes , liked he . could The aristocracy name one— was half an abuse a dozen . , Landed if the proprietors a-year were were an abuse an abuse . He . mi People ght make with an incomes exception of over by say ; £ f ing > that incomes of over j £ s °° a-year resulting from the honest mean working s to man be ' s regarded labour and in that the li sweat ght . of He his would brow vote were for by the no
abolition Crown , the of House many things of Lord . s Among ,. the respectable them he newspapers would include , clergy the - men this state generall of things y , clubs would , and first benefit -class the carriages working . man He . considered He had point fr studied iendl of y the societies view working . He and man meant a debating both by from th club at , a , that subjective and he had belonged once and objective borne to two a banner sion he in wore a procession a helmet and round sash Firisbiiry , carried Circus a board . On on that his occa back - inscribed on a cab horse " Beware « . He of rf addressed tA Cromwell ai the ! Finsbury le of or Eng A ^ death AAbAMIAAVII land , " and from rode the
Ull Circus C-W \^ t * railings V ^ X * Vj ^^ , . S and dk * . ^ was «« V » stifled ^* a' *^^^ % 4 . by VAA ^ the ^ peop fc * >^ V myrmidons * T |^ A ^^ «^ d > of the »* Crown *^** J . »**^^ . he a If great the was Commissioners told orator to . move On that on wanted account by the that police he in meant p . lainer He to Eng was stan li unquestionabl sh d for —well Wapp , th ing en y , at He No > the did he approachin was not much not aware g care general that if there election there was was . . He What any had bad issued the spelling his le address wanted in it . . was _ fr __ ciw _ not XlVb morals *** _ V m * C * AfcJJ , education VMWVIAVAV « . a * *! , and v * Jk *^<* - !>»** all ... that vaa ^ ww - * nonsense ¦—• * " % . ^ *» w m ^** w ^« , but *^ peop *¦»«» mm their »¦*»•» *• *» # . * ri *^ ghts ^ *»« mr mr »» i * . # .
He hoped in a couple of years to see England really free * He would for President soon exp , lain a House what he of meant working b - y men " free -Lords . " A , Cohimons working man to all match the , money every coronet in the Bank on the . treadmill When he , arid had a got fair his division share he of might possibly retire to Australia , and help them to get their rig what _^_ . hts A reluctantly there . . In conclusion admitted « that , <* the he witness » had , been on being ** twice « pressed through , some the -
Bankruptcy Christianity . Court , and had written . several little ... squibs * against In The reply next to witness the Chairman called , was he said the Hon he . meant Barker to Waistcourt present himself , M . P . in shortl It , was and y a for he famil was re-election y again seat . * coming Lord He was Brainwood forward the member as , his the father Conservativ for , Gul had pborough put e can him - . didate Ireland . , His and election God defend cry was the simple right . ** en He ough believed , " No justice he was for a since sound they Tory boug . The ht a Brainwoods peerage of had James alway I . s been As to " sound Ireland Tories , if he had ItChvl his mg way "** J I , instead Aitw ywfc ^^ fc of "V * disestablishing ~ w »** J ^* J ov » M »* w *»* 4 i j ^ the *»&*^ Church ^^«*« s « . w ** he **** would » r *^ like v ***»*
-do it uble they the ought number to , because of bishops they . were If the a conquered Irish did race not , and which ought to did be thankful not even for force the blessings the truth of a down merciful their toleration throats . it Certainl led to y . he True would at cry Eton out and " No Oxford Popery he ! had " Did been not an care intimate what friend Gulpboroug of the h , priest but , the who man did had service evidently in the been Catholic a snob all chapel along at , burnt or would his never house have about turned his ears out it as would he did cert . Yes ainly , if serve the mob him J right ohn , Bull and was it was wide a - glorious awake , and thing -was to as teach just these and tolerant men that and old
religious stituents a fellow about as the ever " thin . Meant end of to the say wedge a whole , " arid lot - to show his them conhow Gladstone ' s unchristian resolutions would very soon touch the Of course Established he would Church be returned itself , a by nd an fin overwhelming ally their own majority pockets * . As raeli to knew its being what he hear was ty , about he did with not his care Reform about Bill that as . regarded Mr . Disboroug country h boroug was still hs , in and the he pockets might of con the fiden Brainwoods tly say that . At Gulp all - consider events , he should fair like to see at it try election and get out . Yes , he would
advocate anything the burning of play Mr . Gladstone an , either . Certainly in effigy he or should otherwise Faux , with lanthorn or without in his a hand cardinal . ' He s hat knew on his Mn head Gladstone , and a inti Guy - h m atel felt y , and his bound respected en d him uty t immensel o his prin y , p but les— upon that the is to hustings say , to himself atheist . —to He describe was a party him man as , a and charlatan whatever , a his blackleg party , cried and an he h cried e was too proud . He of was it . a type Mr . Gladstone of a large said class to of the Eng country lishmen , , " Do unto stone others was a as fool you . The would evidence they should of the do last unto witness you . " Mr . ch Glad was - as thr our ough parcel out given left . in a very flippant manner , was just , concluded
The Eall Oe Tupper.
THE EALL OE TUPPER .
But We Ver Are Y Frail Too . Often Some ...
but ver are y frail too . often Some painfully man , before reminded whose that purity the and best strength of us are of learn tempted character humility , and we have falls from . bowed it We . A can very our onl painful heads y lament in case reverent his of fall moral , admirat and declension strive ion , to is p has hilosopher occurred at latel whose y . Martin feet all Farquhar England Tupper has sat , the so great long moral and learnt new species so much of , poetry that great which and was good neither man rh who yme had nor discovered reason but a
all beautiful pure sentiment , has come down to writing" rhyme ! fallen But Happ this il so y abandonment low he has yet not as to yet of incur his reached principles the the susp next icion has stage been of writing — , we he fear has reason , not the . result pen the of words bad company , " — -but it , is for too —our plain heart , we breaks cannot shut almost our while eyes we to the power cruel of truth Algernon —Martin Charles Farquhar Swinburne Tupper !! has He , fallen the purest into the of has philosop been hers studying , the chosen the words minstrel of the of the erotic Evangelical Pagan bard Church the ,
laureate . of Venus and Faustina ! Whether it be that , the music of Swinburne ' s lyric verse , the ringing charms of his chaste alliteration Tupper have , drugging stolen the his eyes intellect as well and lulling as the to ears sleep of the the vigilance of his conscience , or that the vigorous onslaught made we we eyes do do of by not not the Mazzini know know Protestant : but but ' s devotee certain certain Be * ranger on it it , is is for the . that that all Pop the m in e h the the has yrnns last last atoned to Aphrodite volume volume , in the of of , ;
, distinctl marvellous the verses influence published of Swinbu by M rne . F . in Tupper we line can . Our trace too will not y alldw us to quote many instances every . We can safely space refer Ballads our readers for to the the confirmation volume itself of , known our statement as Tupj . 6 er Who * $ Protestant will not Ballads at once , , perceive The Hymn the influence to Italy \ of The the Halt author before of Rome Poems & and c , in these lines
: — ** Made They witness drunk with df Rome the blood as * al ways the saints the sahie evermore , . ^ Then again" If They his witness craft were the a peril pestilence that lurks over in the each land priest . " , And again , in his ballads on " the Canadian Dominion , " Tupper
has- ^ - ' * What a seed of high thoughts , what a root of good things !" One of Swinburne ' s favourite similes . Then for examples of alliteration take " Let And patrio the n t zeal me of be e promoted ach / ordshi and p be praised / inked , to aj * . lace . " now What celebrated but this passion line for alliteration could have prompted & ijie
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Citation
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Tomahawk (1867-1870), Aug. 22, 1868, page 78, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/t/issues/ttw_22081868/page/10/
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