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

CHAPTER VII
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It is nothing of the kind.

I know no place in the world which is a severer test of a man's tenacity of purpose, than the House of Commons.

I suppose it is because we see the men more publicly there than elsewhere; but I know no place where there are so many ups and downs of human destiny as in the House of Commons--no place, at all events, where one is so struck with the changes, and transformations of human destinies.

The man who, in one or two Sessions, is on his legs every moment--who takes a prominent part in every debate--who has become one of the notabilities of the House--in a year or two's time has sunk to a silent dweller apart from all the eagerness and fever of debate, sinks into melancholy and listlessness, and is almost dead before he has given up his Parliamentary life.

Staying power is the rarest of all Parliamentary powers; Labby has plenty of staying power.
[Sidenote: Sir Charles Dilke.] Another figure which the new House of Commons is gradually beginning to understand is Sir Charles Dilke.


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