Grant's "Recollections of the House of Lords" (1834). (This is not the only instance of a well-known quotation passing unrecognized in Parliament. In 1853, when Bishop Wilberforce made a good-humoured attack on Lord Derby, the latter remarked that a man might "smile and smile and be a villain," and thereby caused much excitement among the Lords, who had not recently studied their "Hamlet.")
294
"Quarterly Review," vol. cxlv. p. 247.
295
"Letters of Runnymede," p. 6.
296
Trevelyan's "Life of Macaulay," vol. ii. p. 76.
297
"La France et L'Angleterre," par F. de Tassies. (Quoted in O'Connell's "Recollections," vol. i. p. 261.)
298
Thomas Moore's "Memoirs," vol. ii. p. 296.
299
Miss Martineau's "History of the Peace," vol. ii. p. 381.
300
Cockburn's "Life of Jeffrey," vol. i. p. 317.
301
Duncombe's "Life of his Father," vol. i. p. 115.
302
Brougham's "Life," vol. iii. p. 117.
303
Supra, p. 131.
304
Townshend's "Proceedings of Both Houses," p. 252.
305
Regulations in the Journals, March 23, 1693.
306
"L'lllustre enceinte présente souvent l'aspect d'une assemblée de yankees beaucoup plus que celui d'une réunion de gentlemen." Franqueville's "Le Gouvernement et le Parlement britaniques," vol. iii. p. 74.
307
Timbs' "Anecdotal Biography," vol. i. p. 234.
308
Pryme's "Recollections," p. 114.
309
Harford's "Recollections of Wilberforce," p. 94.
310
Grant's "Recollections," p. 140.
311
Hayward's "Essays," pp. 364-5.
312
Bell's "Life of Canning," p. 251.
313
Pryme's "Recollections," p. 235.
314
Lord Colchester's "Diary," vol. i. p. 45.
315
"Quarterly Review," vol. xxii. p. 496.
316
Moore's "Life of Byron," 185.
317
Barnes' "Reminiscences," p. 203.
318