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

CHAPTER XII
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Moreover, the native chivalry of his disposition, the curious simplicity which has remained his central characteristic, in spite of all the experiences of the baser side of human nature which must have been crowded into all that half a century of official and Parliamentary life--that unwillingness to see anything but deplorable error in his most rancorous, meanest, and most malignant opponent--all these things make it difficult for him to understand the ugly realities whose serpent heads show themselves plainly to almost every other eye but his.
There is a dispute among the authorities as to the incidents of that Thursday night--some, even among those friendly to the Prime Minister, declaring that there was nothing unusual in the interruptions of that night.

My own recollection is clear that there was a great deal of noise, and that it was so bad that Mr.Chamberlain tried to explain it away, and was careful to absolve himself and his friends from all responsibility for it.

In the general body of the Liberal party there is no doubt whatsoever about that business.

Liberal after Liberal came up to me afterwards, in allusion to a few remarks I felt it my duty to make, to declare their entire agreement with the view I had put forward--that the description of the _Daily News_, though consciously and obviously written in the vein of parody, was a fair and just description of what had taken place.

Sir Henry Roscoe is not an excitable politician, though no man holds to the Liberal faith more firmly.


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