Random Recollections of the House of Commons, from the Year 1830 to the Close of 1835: Including Personal Sketches of the Leading Members of All Parties |
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Page 9
... seldom a greater number are present , and it is not often there are so many . It is unnecessary to repeat , that what has been said respecting the arrangement of the old House equally applies to that of the present . 10 CHAPTER II ...
... seldom a greater number are present , and it is not often there are so many . It is unnecessary to repeat , that what has been said respecting the arrangement of the old House equally applies to that of the present . 10 CHAPTER II ...
Page 17
... seldom at that stage of the bill . When the report of the Com- mittee is read and approved of , the bill is ordered to stand for a third reading on a given day , but it cannot take place on the day on which the report is brought up ...
... seldom at that stage of the bill . When the report of the Com- mittee is read and approved of , the bill is ordered to stand for a third reading on a given day , but it cannot take place on the day on which the report is brought up ...
Page 23
... seldom ex- ceeds six or seven , usually consisting of three or four of the judges , and two or three other peers . The Peers have a right to call for the assistance of Counsel , when any measure which they think requires such aid is ...
... seldom ex- ceeds six or seven , usually consisting of three or four of the judges , and two or three other peers . The Peers have a right to call for the assistance of Counsel , when any measure which they think requires such aid is ...
Page 28
... seldom more than twenty or thirty Peers present , except when some unusually important business is before the house . The place and proceedings are consequently on such occasions extremely dull and uninteresting . Though the Lords have ...
... seldom more than twenty or thirty Peers present , except when some unusually important business is before the house . The place and proceedings are consequently on such occasions extremely dull and uninteresting . Though the Lords have ...
Page 43
... seldom or never called into full play . He usually spoke with much ease . He did not hesi- tate or falter , or become confused . He spoke as one who knew his subject , and who was sufficiently confident in his own intellectual resources ...
... seldom or never called into full play . He usually spoke with much ease . He did not hesi- tate or falter , or become confused . He spoke as one who knew his subject , and who was sufficiently confident in his own intellectual resources ...
Other editions - View all
Random Recollections of the House of Commons, From the Year 1830 to the ... James Grant No preview available - 2017 |
Random Recollections of the House of Commons: From the Year 1830 to the ... James Grant No preview available - 2019 |
Common terms and phrases
address their Lordships addressing the house arguments attacks attention benches Bishop Bishop of Exeter called character Church circumstances clear colour complexion conduct considerable Corn Laws countenance course dark Earl Grey effect eloquence evinced expression face favour feeling friends gesture give Grace hair head hear heard House of Commons House of Lords importance King last session liberal Lord Brougham Lord Chancellor Lord Durham Lord Holland Lord Lyndhurst Lord Melbourne Lower House manner matter measure ment mind Minister never noble Duke noble Earl noble Lord noble Marquis nobleman observations occasions opinions opponent opposite side Parliament party Peers personal appearance political possesses present principles question Reform Bill remarkable respect resume his seat Right Rev rises seldom sentences Session of 1834 speaker speaking speeches style talents throne tion tone Tory Toryism Upper House usually utterance voice vote Woolsack words zeal
Popular passages
Page 178 - ... its kindred throne! You have said, my lords, you have willed — the Church and the king have willed — that the queen should be deprived of its solemn service. She...
Page 178 - Brougham continued), is the case now before you, and such is the evidence by which it is attempted to be upheld. It is evidence — inadequate to prove any proposition ; impotent, to deprive the lowest subject of any civil right ; ridiculous, to establish the least offence ; scandalous, to support a charge of the highest nature ; monstrous, to ruin the honour of the Queen of England. What shall I say of it, then, as evidence to support a judicial act of legislature, an ex postfacto law ? My lords,...
Page 178 - ... continue to adorn it — save the crown, which is threatened with irreparable injury — save the aristocracy, which is surrounded with danger — save the altar, which is no longer safe when its kindred throne is shaken. You see that when the church and the throne would allow of no church solemnity in behalf of the Queen, the heartfelt prayers of the people rose to Heaven for her protection. I pray Heaven for her ; and...
Page 18 - Le Roi remercie ses loyaux sujets, accepte leur benevolence, et aussi le veut," — which means that " The King thanks his loyal subjects, accepts their benevolence, and wills it so to be.
Page 13 - ... to make out the word, he was obliged to give it up ; when, turning to Lord Melbourne, who stood on his right hand, and looking him most significantly in the face, he said in a tone sufficiently loud to be audible in all parts of the House, 'Eh! what is it?
Page 13 - He then again, though evidently fatigued by the difficulty of reading in the first instance, began at the beginning, and read through the speech in a manner which would have done credit to any professor of elocution, — though it was clear he laboured under a slight hoarseness, caused most probably by cold.
Page 174 - ... and whosoever answereth another man's speech, shall apply his answer to the matter, without wrong to the person ; and as nothing offensive is to be spoken, so nothing is to be ill taken, if the party that speaks it shall presently make a fair exposition, or clear denial of the words that might bear any ill construction; and if any offence be given in that kind, as the house itself will be very sensible thereof, so it will sharply censure the offender, and give the party offended a fit reparation...
Page 178 - Rescue the country ; save the people, of •whom you are the ornaments ; but, severed from whom, you can no more live than the blossom that is severed from the root and tree on which it grows. Save the country, therefore, that you may continue to adorn it — save the crown, which is threatened with irreparable injury — save the aristocracy, which is surrounded with danger — save the altar, which is no longer safe when its kindred throne is shaken. You see that when the church and the throne...
Page 13 - ... raising his head, and looking at the Lords and Commons, he addressed them, on the spur of the moment, in a perfectly distinct voice, and without the least embarrassment, or the mistake of a single word, in these terms : — "MY LORDS AND GENTLEMEN,— " I have hitherto not been able, from want of light, to read this speech in the way its importance deserves ; but, as lights are now brought me, I will read it again from the commencement, and iu a way which, I trust, will command your attention.
Page 35 - Hear, hear," from the Tory benches. ) The Lord Chancellor at this moment entered the House, and addressed their Lordships in the most emphatic manner in the following terms : — " My Lords, I have never yet heard it doubted that the King possesses the prerogative of dissolving Parliament at pleasure ; still less have I ever known a doubt to exist on the subject at a moment when the Lower House has thought fit to refuse the supplies.