[Sketches In The House (1893) by T. P. O’Connor]@TWC D-Link book
Sketches In The House (1893)

CHAPTER IV
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Such being the material, a nice little plot was concocted by which a certain number of young members, full of all that vague distrust of existing ministries which belongs to ardent young Radicalism, were to be induced to give a vote against Mr.Gladstone's proposal to take away the time of private members.

And it is reported that one member of the Liberal party had begun operations as many as four weeks before Mr.
Gladstone's Bill came on, and had tried to extort a number of pledges, the full meaning of which would only come upon the unhappy people who made them when they had endangered or destroyed the best of modern Ministries.
[Sidenote: The out-manoeuvred Tories.] I think I have now said enough to explain what I am going to relate.

Mr.
Gladstone explained his proposal; which briefly was, that in order to get on with Home Rule it was necessary to take the time of private members.

As will have been seen, the meaning of this would have been to have swept away at once all the private motions in which members were interested.

When the motion came to be discussed, there was a very curious phenomenon.


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