Abase V. Abbess N. Abbey N. Abbot N. Abdicate V. Abdomen N. Abdominal N

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Abase V. Abbess N. Abbey N. Abbot N. Abdicate V. Abdomen N. Abdominal N abase v. abbess n. abbey n. abbot n. abdicate v. abdomen n. abdominal n. abduction n. abed adv. aberration n. abet v. abeyance n. abhorrence n. abhorrent adj. abidance n. abject adj. abjure v. able-bodied adj. ablution n. abnegate v. abnormal adj. abominable adj. abominate v. abomination n. aboriginal adj. aborigines n. aboveboard adv. abrade v. abrasion n. abridge v. abridgment n. abrogate v. abrupt adj. abscess n. abscission n. abscond v. absence n. absent-minded adj. absolution n. absolve v. absorb v. absorption n. abstain v. abstemious adj. abstinence n. abstruse adj. absurd adj. abundant adj. abusive adj. abut v. abyss n. academic adj. academician n. academy n. accede v. accelerate v. accept v. access n. accessible adj. accession n. accessory n. acclaim v. accommodate v. accompaniment n. accompanist n. accompany v. accomplice n. accomplish v. accordion n. accost v. account n. accouter v. accredit v. accumulate v. accuracy n. accurate adj. accursed adj. accusation n. accusatory adj. accuse v. accustom v. acerbity n. acetate n. acetic adj. ache v. Achillean adj. achromatic adj. acid n. acidify v. acknowledge v. acknowledgment n. acme n. acoustic adj. acquaint v. acquiesce v. acquiescence n. acquire v. acquisition n. acquit v. acquittal n. acquittance n. acreage n. acrid adj. acrimonious adj. acrimony n. actionable adj. actuality n. actuary n. actuate v. acumen n. acute adj. adamant n. addendum n. addle v. adduce v. adhere v. adherence n. adherent adj. adhesion n. adieu inter. adjacency n. adjacent n. adjudge v. adjunct n. adjuration n. adjutant adj. administrator n. admissible adj. admittance n. admonish v. admonition n. ado n. adoration n. adroit adj. adulterant n. adulterate v. adumbrate v. advent n. adverse adj. adversity n. advert v. advertiser n. advisory adj. advocacy n. advocate n. aerial adj. aeronaut n. aeronautics n. aerostat n. aerostatics n. affable adj. affect v. affectation n. affiliate n. affirmative adj. affix v. affluence n. affront n. afire adv. afoot adv. aforesaid adj. afresh adv. afterthought n. agglomerate v. aggrandize v. aggravate v. aggravation n. aggregate n. aggress v. aggression n. aggrieve v. aghast adj. agile adj. agitate v. agrarian adj. aide-de-camp n. ailment n. airy adj. akin adj. alabaster n. alacrity n. albeit conj. albino n. album n. alchemy n. alcohol n. alcoholism n. alcove n. alder n. alderman n. aldermanship n. alias n. alien n. alienable adj. alienate v. alienation n. aliment n. alkali n. allay v. allege v. allegory n. alleviate v. alley n. alliance n. allot v. allotment n. allude v. allusion n. alluvion n. ally n. almanac n. aloof adv. altar n. alter v. alteration n. altercate v. alternate n. alternative n. altitude n. alto n. altruism n. altruist n. amalgam n. amalgamate v. amateur adj. amatory adj. ambidextrous adj. ambiguous adj. ambitious adj. ambrosial adj. ambulance n. ambulate v. ambush n. ameliorate v. amenable adj. Americanism n. amicable adj. amity n. amorous adj. amorphous adj. amour n. ampere n. ampersand n. amphibious adj. amphitheater n. amplitude n. amply adv. amputate v. amusement n. anachronism n. anagram n. analogous adj. analogy n. analyst n. analyze v. anarchy n. anathema n. anatomy n. ancestry n. anecdote n. anemia n. anemic adj. anemometer n. anesthetic adj. anew adv. angelic adj. Anglophobia n. Anglo-Saxon n. angular adj. anhydrous adj. animadversion n. animadvert v. animalcule n. animate v. animosity n. annalist n. annals n. annex v. annihilate v. annotate v. annual adj. annuity n. annunciation n. anode n. anonymous adj. antagonism n. Antarctic adj. ante v. antecede v. antecedent n. antechamber n. antedate v. antediluvian adj. antemeridian adj. antemundane adj. antenatal adj. anterior adj. anteroom n. anthology n. anthracite n. anthropology n. anthropomorphous adj. antic n. Antichrist n. anticlimax n. anticyclone n. antidote n. antilogy n. antipathize v. antiphon n. antiphony n. antipodes n. antiquary n. antiquate v. antique adj. antiseptic n. antislavery adj. antispasmodic adj. antistrophe n. antitoxin n. antonym n. anxious adj. apathy n. aperture n. apex n. aphorism n. apiary n. apogee n. apology n. apostasy n. apostate adj. apostle n. apothecary n. apotheosis n. appall v. apparent adj. apparition n. appease v. appellate adj. appellation n. append v. appertain v. apposite adj. apposition n. appraise v. appreciable adj. apprehend v. apprehensible adj. approbation n. appropriate adj. aqueduct n. aqueous adj. arbiter n. arbitrary adj. arbitrate v. arbor n. arboreal adj. arborescent adj. arboretum n. arboriculture n. arcade n. archaic adj. archaism n. archangel n. archbishop n. archdeacon n. archaeology n. archetype n. archipelago n. ardent adj. ardor n. arid adj. aristocracy n. aristocrat n. armada n. armful n. armory n. aroma n. arraign v. arrange v. arrangement n. arrant adj. arrear n. arrival n. arrogant adj. arrogate v. Artesian well artful adj. Arthurian adj. artifice n. artless adj. ascendant adj. ascension n. ascent n. ascetic adj. ascribe v. asexual adj. ashen adj. askance adv. asperity n. aspirant n. aspiration n. aspire v. assailant n. assassin n. assassinate v. assassination n. assay n. assent v. assess v. assessor n. assets n. assiduous adj. assignee n. assimilate v. assonance n. assonant adj. assonate v. assuage v. astringent adj. astute adj. atheism n. athirst adj. athwart adv. atomizer n. atone v. atonement n. atrocious adj. atrocity n. attache n. attest v. attorney-general n. auburn adj. audacious adj. audible adj. audition n. auditory adj. augment v. augur v. Augustinian adj. aura n. aural adj. auricle n. auricular adj. auriferous adj. aurora n. auspice n. austere adj. autarchy n. authentic adj. authenticity n. autobiography n. autocracy n. autocrat n. automaton n. autonomous adj. autonomy n. autopsy n. autumnal adj. auxiliary n. avalanche n. avarice n. aver v. averse adj. aversion n. avert v. aviary n. avidity n. avocation n. avow v. awaken v. awry adv. aye adv. azalea n. azure n. Baconian adj. bacterium n. badger v. baffle v. bailiff n. baize n. bale n. baleful adj. ballad n. balsam n. banal adj. barcarole n. barograph n. barometer n. barring prep. baritone adj. bask v. bass adj. baste v. baton n. battalion n. batten n. batter n. bauble n. bawl v. beatify v. beatitude n. beau n. becalm v. beck v. bedaub v. bedeck v. bedlam n. befog v. befriend v. beget v. begrudge v. belate v. belay v. belie v. believe v. belittle v. belle n. bellicose adj. belligerent adj. bemoan v. benediction n. benefactor n. benefice n. beneficent adj. beneficial adj. beneficiary n. benefit n. benevolence n. benevolent adj. benign adj. benignant adj. benignity n. benison n. bequeath v. bereave v. berth n. beseech v. beset v. besmear v. bestial adj. bestrew v. bestride v. bethink v. betide v. betimes adv. betroth v. betrothal n. bevel n. bewilder v. bibliomania n. bibliography n. bibliophile n. bibulous adj. bide v. biennial n. bier n. bigamist n. bigamy n. bight n. bilateral adj. bilingual adj. biograph n. biography n. biology n. biped n. birthright n. bitterness n. blase adj. blaspheme v. blatant adj. blaze n. blazon v. bleak adj. blemish n. blithe adj. blithesome adj. blockade n. boatswain n. bodice n. bodily adj. boisterous adj. bole n. bolero n. boll n. bolster v. bomb n. bombard v. bombardier n. bombast n. boorish adj. bore v. borough n. bosom n. botanical adj. botanize v. botany n. bountiful adj. Bowdlerize v. bowler n. boycott v. brae n. braggart n. brandish v. bravado n. bravo interj. bray n. braze v. brazier n. breach n. breaker n. breech n. brethren n. brevity n. bric-a-brac n. bridle n. brigade n. brigadier n. brigand n. brimstone n. brine n. bristle n. Britannia n. Briticism n. brittle adj. broach v. broadcast adj. brogan n. brogue n. brokerage n. bromine n. bronchitis n. bronchus n. brooch n. brotherhood n. browbeat v. brusque adj. buffoon n. buffoonery n. bulbous adj. bullock n. bulrush n. bulwark n. bumper n. bumptious adj. bungle v. buoyancy n. buoyant adj. bureau n. bureaucracy n. burgess n. burgher n. burnish v. bursar n. bustle v. butt v. butte n. buttress n. by-law n. cabal n. cabalism n. cabinet n. cacophony n. cadaverous adj. cadence n. cadenza n. caitiff adj. cajole v. cajolery n. calculable adj. calculus n. callosity n. callow adj. calorie n. calumny n. Calvary n. Calvinism n. Calvinize v. came n. cameo n. campaign n. Canaanite n. canary adj. candid adj. candor n. canine adj. canon n. cant v. cantata n. canto n. cantonment n. capacious adj. capillary n. capitulate v. caprice n. caption n. captious adj. captivate v. carcass n. cardiac adj. cardinal adj. caret n. caricature n. carnage n. carnal adj. carnivorous adj. carouse v. carrion n. cartilage n. cartridge n. caste n. castigate v. casual adj. casualty n. cataclysm n. cataract n. catastrophe n. cathode n. Catholicism n. catholicity n. cat-o-nine-tails n. caucus n. causal adj. caustic adj. cauterize v. cede v. censor n. censorious adj. census n. centenary adj. centiliter n. centimeter n. centurion n. cereal adj. ceremonial adj. ceremonious adj. cessation n. cession n. chagrin n. chameleon adj. chancery n. chaos n. characteristic n. characterize v. charlatan n. chasm n. chasten v. chastise v. chastity n. chateau n. chattel n. check v. chiffon n. chivalry n. cholera n. choleric adj. choral adj. Christ n. christen v. Christendom n. chromatic adj. chronology n. chronometer n. cipher v. circulate v. circumference n. circumlocution n. circumnavigate v. circumscribe v. circumspect adj. citadel n. cite v. claimant n. clairvoyance n. clamorous adj. clan n. clandestine adj. clangor n. clarify v. clarion n. classify v. clearance n. clemency n. clement adj. close-hauled adj. clothier n. clumsy adj. coagulate v. coagulant adj. coalescence n. coalition n. coddle v. codicil n. coerce v.
Recommended publications
  • Page 1 Halsbury's Laws of England (3) RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN THE
    Page 1 Halsbury's Laws of England (3) RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN THE CROWN AND THE JUDICIARY 133. The monarch as the source of justice. The constitutional status of the judiciary is underpinned by its origins in the royal prerogative and its legal relationship with the Crown, dating from the medieval period when the prerogatives were exercised by the monarch personally. By virtue of the prerogative the monarch is the source and fountain of justice, and all jurisdiction is derived from her1. Hence, in legal contemplation, the Sovereign's Majesty is deemed always to be present in court2 and, by the terms of the coronation oath and by the maxims of the common law, as also by the ancient charters and statutes confirming the liberties of the subject, the monarch is bound to cause law and justice in mercy to be administered in all judgments3. This is, however, now a purely impersonal conception, for the monarch cannot personally execute any office relating to the administration of justice4 nor effect an arrest5. 1 Bac Abr, Prerogative, D1: see COURTS AND TRIBUNALS VOL 24 (2010) PARA 609. 2 1 Bl Com (14th Edn) 269. 3 As to the duty to cause law and justice to be executed see PARA 36 head (2). 4 2 Co Inst 187; 4 Co Inst 71; Prohibitions del Roy (1607) 12 Co Rep 63. James I is said to have endeavoured to revive the ancient practice of sitting in court, but was informed by the judges that he could not deliver an opinion: Prohibitions del Roy (1607) 12 Co Rep 63; see 3 Stephen's Commentaries (4th Edn) 357n.
    [Show full text]
  • Thk London Gazette, May 1$ 1874. 2575
    THK LONDON GAZETTE, MAY 1$ 1874. 2575, *e vicarage "or vicarages, in his or their diocese or Siis consent, in. writing, to the union of the • said' «* dioceses, being either in the same parish or con- benefices: into one benefice, with cure of souls for- " tiguous to each other; and-of which the aggregate ecclesiastical purposes; that six weeks and upwards1 " population shall not exceed one thousand five trefore certifying such inquiry and consent to yom? •" hundred persons, and the aggregate yearly value Majesty in Council we caused copies in writing ofj " shall not exceed five hundred pounds, may, with the aforesaid representation of the said Lord Bishop " advantage to the interests of religion, be united to be affixed on the principal outer door of the' 4t into one benefice, the said Archbishop of the parish church of each of the said benefices, with " Province shall inquire into the circumstances of notice, to any person or persons interested that hey •"• the case ; and if on such enquiry it shall appear she, or they might, within such six weeks, show- *' to him that such union may be usefully made, cause, in writing, under his, her, or their hand or " and will not be of inconvenient extent, and that j lands to us, the said Archbishop, against such " the patron or patrons of the said benefices, union, and no such cause has been shown; the- " sinecure rectory or rectoriesj vicarage or vicar- representation of the said Lord Bishop of Worces- •" ages respectively, is or are consenting thereto, ter, our inquiry into the circumstances
    [Show full text]
  • The Man Who Enriched – and Robbed – the Tories
    Parliamentary History,Vol. 40, pt. 2 (2021), pp. 378–390 The Man Who Enriched – and Robbed – the Tories ALISTAIR LEXDEN House of Lords Horace Farquhar, financier, courtier and politician, was a man without a moral compass. He combined ruthlessness and dishonesty with great charm. As a Liberal Unionist MP in the 1890s, his chief aim was to get a peerage, for which he paid handsomely. He exploited everyone who came his way to increase his wealth and boost his social position, gaining an earldom from Lloyd George, to whose notorious personal political fund he diverted substantial amounts from the Conservative Party, of which he was treasurer from 1911 to 1923, the first holder of that post. The Tories’ money went into his own pocket as well. During these years, he also held senior positions at court, retaining under George V the trust of the royal family which he had won under Edward VII.By the time of his death in 1923,however,his wealth had disappeared,and he was found to be bankrupt. He was a man of many secrets. They have been probed and explored, drawing on such material relating to his scandalous career as has so far come to light. Keywords: Conservative Party; financial corruption; homosexuality; Liberal Unionist Party; monarchy; royal family; sale of honours 1 Horace Brand Farquhar (1844–1923), pronounced Farkwer, 1st and last Earl Farquhar, of St Marylebone,was one of the greatest rogues of his time,a man capable of almost any misdeed or sin short of murder (and it is hard to feel completely confident that he would have drawn thelineeventhere).1 He had three great loves: money, titles and royalty.
    [Show full text]
  • Victoria Rf,Gine
    ANNO DECIMO TERTIO & DECIMO QUARTO VICTORIA RF,GINE. C A P. XCVIII. An Act to amend the Law relating to the holding of Benefices in Plurality. [14th August 1850.] WHEREAS an Act was passed in the Session of Parliament held in the First and Second Years of the Reign of Her present Majesty, intituled An Act to abridge the holding 1 & 2 Vict. c. 106. of Benefices in Plurality, and to make better Provision for the Residence of the Clergy ; and it is by the said Act provided, that no Spiritual Person shall hold together any Two Benefices, if, at 'the Time of his Admission, Institution, or being licensed to the Second Benefice, the Value of the Two Benefices jointly shall exceed the yearly Value of One thousand Pounds, and that the said Benefices shall be within the Distance of Ten Statute Miles the one from the ,other, and that the Population of the said Benefices shall not exceed a certain Amount, as provided by the said Act : And whereas it is desirable further to restrain Spiritual Persons from holding Benefices in Plurality : Be it therefore enacted by the Queen's most Excellent Majesty, by and with the Advice and Consent of the Lords Spiritual and Temporal, and Commons, in this present Parliament assembled, and by the Authority of the same, That, notwithstanding any Pro- SpiritualPer- sons not to vision in the said recited Act contained, it shall not be lawful, after hold Bene- the passing of this Act, for, any. Spiritual Person to take and hold fices in Plu- rality except together any Two Benefices, except in the Case of Two Benefices the under cer- Churches of which are within Three Miles of one another by the tain Circum- stan ces.
    [Show full text]
  • I1 the PUBLIC LIFE of FRANCIS BACON 0 the Majority of Readers, the Name Francis Bacon T Suggests Immediately One of the Most Versatile Gen- Iuses of All Time
    I1 THE PUBLIC LIFE OF FRANCIS BACON 0 the majority of readers, the name Francis Bacon T suggests immediately one of the most versatile gen- iuses of all time. So voluminous and so diversified was the output of his mind in the fields of philosophy, science, and literature, that it is easy to overlook the fact that the man had also a busy career in the alien field of politics, one that possibly was hardly in keeping with the nobility of his other work. Could we but have a true picture of Bacon’s entire career, it would, like the life and even the art of his day, reveal strong contrasts of light and of shadow. The phi- losopher seems hardly the same being as the courtier and politician. A picture of such irreconcilable contrasts is always difficult to evaluate permanently and fairly. Some see only the bright portions while others are more strongly affected by the shadows. So it is with the picture of Bacon. Spedding, his greatest biographer, has sought to gloss over many of his defects; and others, carried away by conspicu- ous political failures, have adopted the un-Baconian attitude of refusing to believe that much good could originate with this political manipulator of the seventeenth century. On the other hand, Pope sought in vain to epitomize fairly the many-sided Bacon as “the wisest, brightest, and meanest of mankind”; and Macaulay, in his melodramatic essay, de- scribed him as a monster, part angel and part snake. End- less controversy has raged over this picture of conflicting tendencies, and so it will always be, for Bacon’s life is an 23 24 Lectures on Francis Bacon enigma.
    [Show full text]
  • Examples of the Practice of Bishop Hoadly at Winchester (1734-61)
    Proc. Hampshire Field Club Archaeol. Soc. 65, 2010, 191-201 (Hampshire Studies 2010) PATRONAGE AND SINECURE: EXAMPLES OF THE PRACTICE OF BISHOP HOADLY AT WINCHESTER (1734-61) By JOHN DEARNLEY ABSTRACT had to rely on informal networks supported by family and social relationships. As this dis- This paper explores the ways in which an 18th-century cussion of the patronage of Bishop Benjamin Bishop of Winchester, Benjamin Hoadly (b. 1676), Hoadly (1734-61) will demonstrate, helping distributed some of the favours at his command. It one's family was a natural course to take, and describes how Hoadly provided his son with a series of helping someone else to maintain another set livings and then agreed with Mr Folkes, President of of family ties was a more obvious thing to do the Royal Society, to transfer one of them to a relative then than now. of the former Archbishop of Canterbury, one William While reading on a separate matter in the Wake. When Wake proved unqualified for that par- library of the Royal Society, I came across ticular living, it was passed to another relative by correspondence between Hoadly, Dr Martin marriage of the Archbishop, and William was given a Folkes President of the Royal Society, and two different living. Questions are raised about why Hoadly men whom they set out to favour. The letters worked to secure plural livings for two relatives of a display the complete acceptance of a system in man with whom he had been on bad terms, especially which the powerful looked after kindred and when one beneficiary appeared to be deeply incompetent friends - and friends of friends -without regard and untruthful.
    [Show full text]
  • "The Jacksonian Reformation: Political Patronage and Republican Identity"
    University of Tennessee, Knoxville TRACE: Tennessee Research and Creative Exchange Doctoral Dissertations Graduate School 8-2019 "The Jacksonian Reformation: Political Patronage and Republican Identity" Max Matherne University of Tennessee Follow this and additional works at: https://trace.tennessee.edu/utk_graddiss Recommended Citation Matherne, Max, ""The Jacksonian Reformation: Political Patronage and Republican Identity". " PhD diss., University of Tennessee, 2019. https://trace.tennessee.edu/utk_graddiss/5675 This Dissertation is brought to you for free and open access by the Graduate School at TRACE: Tennessee Research and Creative Exchange. It has been accepted for inclusion in Doctoral Dissertations by an authorized administrator of TRACE: Tennessee Research and Creative Exchange. For more information, please contact [email protected]. To the Graduate Council: I am submitting herewith a dissertation written by Max Matherne entitled ""The Jacksonian Reformation: Political Patronage and Republican Identity"." I have examined the final electronic copy of this dissertation for form and content and recommend that it be accepted in partial fulfillment of the equirr ements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy, with a major in History. Daniel Feller, Major Professor We have read this dissertation and recommend its acceptance: Luke Harlow, Ernest Freeberg, Reeve Huston Accepted for the Council: Dixie L. Thompson Vice Provost and Dean of the Graduate School (Original signatures are on file with official studentecor r ds.) The Jacksonian Reformation: Political Patronage and Republican Identity A Dissertation Presented for the Doctor of Philosophy Degree The University of Tennessee, Knoxville Max Matherne August 2019 Dedicated to the memory of Joshua Stephen Hodge (1984-2019), a great historian and an even better friend.
    [Show full text]
  • The London Gazette, March 31, 1685. 1459
    THE LONDON GAZETTE, MARCH 31, 1685. 1459 Chapter have caused oar common seal to be affixed tions for regulating the course and succession in to these presents and I the said Robert Jar rat t ** which the patrons, if there be more than one Crosthwaite have signed the same. '* patron, shall presenter nominate to such united " Dated this sixteenth day of February one '* benefice, from time to time, as the same dhall thousand eight hundred and eighty-five. '* become vacant." And whereas the Lord Archbishop of Canter- bur)*, pursuant to the provisions of the said Actr haih duly prepared and laid before Her Majesty in Council a certificate in writing, bearing date the sixth day of March, in the year of our Lord " B. J. Crosthwaite. one thousand eight hundred and eighty-five, in the Now therefore Her Majesty in Council, by words following, that is to say :— and with the advice of Her said Council, is "To the QUEEN's Most Excellent Majesty in pleased to order, as it is hereby ordered, that the Council. said scheme be carried into effect. ':Wc the undersigned Edward "White Arch- C: L. Peel' bishop of the Province of Canterbury Primate of all England and Metropolitan do hereby certify to Your Majesty in Council. T the "Court at Windsor, the 26th day of " That ti:e Right Reverend George Lord March, 1885. Bishop of Salisbury as Bishop of the diocese PRESENT, within which nro situate the vicarage of Cooinbe The QUEEN's Most Excellent Majesty in Council. Bissett in the county of Wilts and the vicarage of IloiningtuH in tho same county having repre-
    [Show full text]
  • The Unreformed Parliament 1714-1832
    THE UNREFORMED PARLIAMENT 1714-1832 General 6806. Abbatista, Guido. "Parlamento, partiti e ideologie politiche nell'Inghilterra del settecento: temi della storiografia inglese da Namier a Plumb." Societa e Storia 9, no. 33 (Luglio-Settembre 1986): 619-42. ['Parliament, parties, and political ideologies in eighteenth-century England: themes in English historiography from Namier to Plumb'.] 6807. Adell, Rebecca. "The British metrological standardization debate, 1756-1824: the importance of parliamentary sources in its reassessment." Parliamentary History 22 (2003): 165-82. 6808. Allen, John. "Constitution of Parliament." Edinburgh Review 26 (Feb.-June 1816): 338-83. [Attributed in the Wellesley Index.] 6809. Allen, Mary Barbara. "The question of right: parliamentary sovereignty and the American colonies, 1736- 1774." Ph.D., University of Kentucky, 1981. 6810. Armitage, David. "Parliament and international law in the eighteenth century." In Parliaments, nations and identities in Britain and Ireland, 1660-1850, edited by Julian Hoppit: 169-86. Manchester: Manchester University Press, 2003. 6811. Bagehot, Walter. "The history of the unreformed Parliament and its lessons." National Review 10 (Jan.- April 1860): 215-55. 6812. ---. The history of the unreformed Parliament, and its lessons. An essay ... reprinted from the "National Review". London: Chapman & Hall, 1860. 43p. 6813. ---. "The history of the unreformed Parliament and its lessons." In Essays on parliamentary reform: 107- 82. London: Kegan Paul, 1860. 6814. ---. "The history of the unreformed Parliament and its lessons." In The collected works of Walter Bagehot, edited by Norman St. John-Stevas. Vol. 6: 263-305. London: The Economist, 1974. 6815. Beatson, Robert. A chronological register of both Houses of the British Parliament, from the Union in 1708, to the third Parliament of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, in 1807.
    [Show full text]
  • JOHN SINGLETON COPLEY, LORD LYNDHURST* by SIR WILLIAM Holdswortht
    JOHN SINGLETON COPLEY, LORD LYNDHURST* By SIR WILLIAM HOLDSWORTHt THE best account of John Singleton Copley, Lord Lyndhurst, is that by J. B. Atlay in his The Victorian Chancellors. Atlay had a genius for biography; and his life of Lyndhurst has done much to extract from Lord Campbell's maliciously inaccurate biography, from Theodore Martin's ex- posure of Campbell's malicious inaccuracies, and from other sources, the true story of his life. That story was long obscured by two facts: first, that Lyndhurst was the leader of the Tory or Conservative party in the House of Lords; secondly, that history has to a large extent been written from the Whig or Liberal standpoint. Bagehot thought that it was neces- sary to explain, what to him, as a convinced Liberal, was something of a problem- how it was that a man with Lyndhurst's great intellectual powers could be a Conservative leader? Indeed, if we look at his career from this party standpoint, it is somewhat mysterious. In his youth lie was said (though he always denied it) to have been a Whig and some- thing more than a Whig; and yet throughout his official life lie was a Tory and Conservative leader. Moreover, though he was a Tory and a Conservatiye, he gave valuable help, during his period of office as Chan- cellor and later, in carrying many measures of law reform. It is only in these later years, when the party politics of the nineteenth century have ceased to influence, consciously or unconsciously, historians' estimates of the men and events of that century, that it is possible to see that this problem, like others, is the product of the fog created by these party politics.
    [Show full text]
  • House of Lords Official Report
    Vol. 787 Tuesday No. 72 19 December 2017 PARLIAMENTARYDEBATES (HANSARD) HOUSE OF LORDS OFFICIAL REPORT ORDEROFBUSINESS House of Lords: Lord Speaker’s Committee Report Motion to Take Note.....................................................................................................1965 Questions Energy: Domestic Tariffs ..............................................................................................2001 Smoking: Vaping ..........................................................................................................2003 Sexual Harassment .......................................................................................................2006 Homelessness: Temporary Accommodation.................................................................2008 Laser Misuse (Vehicles) Bill [HL] First Reading.................................................................................................................2010 Secure Tenancies (Victims of Domestic Abuse) Bill [HL] First Reading.................................................................................................................2010 House of Lords: Lord Speaker’s Committee Report Motion to Take Note (Continued) ................................................................................2011 Local Government Finance Settlement Statement......................................................................................................................2058 House of Lords: Lord Speaker’s Committee Report Motion to Take Note (Continued)................................................................................2070
    [Show full text]
  • The English Constitution Walter Bagehot
    The English Constitution Walter Bagehot Second Edition 1873. Contents Introduction to the Second Edition. .............................5 I. The Cabinet. ..........................................................42 II. The Monarchy. .....................................................61 III. The House of Lords.............................................93 IV. The House of Commons. ................................... 117 V. On Changes of Ministry. .....................................145 VI. Its Supposed Checks and Balances. ..................170 VII. The Prerequisites of Cabinet Government, and the Peculiar Form Which They Have Assumed in En- gland. .................................................................191 VIII. Its History, and the Effects of That History. — Conclusion. ........................................................201 Notes .......................................................................213 Introduction to the Second Edition. There is a great difficulty in the way of a writer who attempts to sketch a living Constitution, — a Constitution that is in actual work and power. The difficulty is that the object is in constant change. An historical writer does not feel this difficulty: he deals only with the past; he can say definitely, the Constitution worked in such and such a manner in the year at which he begins, and in a manner in such and such respects different in the year at which he ends; he begins with a definite point of time and ends with one also. But a contemporary writer who tries to paint what is before him is puzzled and perplexed; what he sees is chang- ing daily. He must paint it as it stood at some one time, or else he will be putting side by side in his representations things which never were con- temporaneous in reality. The difficulty is the greater because a writer who deals with a living government naturally compares it with the most important other living governments, and these are changing too; what he illustrates are altered in one way, and his sources of illustration are altered probably in a different way.
    [Show full text]