Parliament: Its Romance, Its Comedy, Its PathosP.S. King & Son, 1902 - 406 pages |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 39
Page 86
... Table in the centre of the floor , at which sit the three Clerks of the House , a small table was substituted . The cross - benches near the Bar , at the end of the Chamber , and the Woolsack of the Lord Chancellor a broad crimson ...
... Table in the centre of the floor , at which sit the three Clerks of the House , a small table was substituted . The cross - benches near the Bar , at the end of the Chamber , and the Woolsack of the Lord Chancellor a broad crimson ...
Page 87
... Table in the centre of the floor , at which sit the three Clerks of the House , a small table was substituted . The cross - benches near the Bar , at the end of the Chamber , and the Woolsack of the Lord Chancellor - a broad crimson ...
... Table in the centre of the floor , at which sit the three Clerks of the House , a small table was substituted . The cross - benches near the Bar , at the end of the Chamber , and the Woolsack of the Lord Chancellor - a broad crimson ...
Page 120
... table , and Cobbett was a strict teetotaller . Probably Nicholas the butler was wroth with them because they never spent a crown on a bottle of Bellamy's port ; but , at the same time , he could not complain as an additional grievance ...
... table , and Cobbett was a strict teetotaller . Probably Nicholas the butler was wroth with them because they never spent a crown on a bottle of Bellamy's port ; but , at the same time , he could not complain as an additional grievance ...
Contents
СКАР | 1 |
THE FIRST OF OUR CONSTITUTIONAL SOVEREIGNS | 25 |
HOW EDWARD VII OPENED HIS FIRST PARLIAMENT | 84 |
12 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
Address allegiance Archbishop Bellamy's Bench Bill Brougham called calumnious carried Catholic Chair Chamber Charles Cobbett Constitution course Court cried Crown Daniel O'Connell debate declared Disraeli Duke duty Earl England expression Gallery George Gladstone Government Hansard hear honourable gentleman honourable member House of Commons House of Lords Houses of Parliament humour Ireland Irish member King laughter letter Lord Aberdeen Lord Chancellor Lord John Russell Lord Keeper Lord Palmerston Magee maiden speech Majesty Majesty's members of Parliament ment motion never newspapers noble oath occasion opinion Origin of Phrase Palace Palace of Westminster Parlia Parliamentary party passed Peel peers person Pitt political Prerogative Prime Minister Prince Albert privilege Protestant Queen Victoria question reign replied right honourable robes Royal rule satchel Seal seat Session Sir Robert sitting speaking statesmen Throne tion Tory vote Westminster Whig William Woolsack words writing wrote