By the Grace of God. Master Ridley, we have lit such a candle in England this day as shall never be put out[Page 179 line 15] Reuters and the Press Association Two of the great news agencies: both are still (2008) functioning in London, though for Reuters news is now only about a tenth of its business.
'Last night I lay a sleeping'Kipling had already taken the refrain from another of Weatherley's songs and developed it into his poem "The Gipsy Trail". (see KJ 119).
and the refrain
Jerusalem! Jerusalem! Lift up your voice and sing!
Hosanna in the highest, Hosanna to your King!...
Some village-Hampden, that with dauntless breast[Page 195 line 29] triple-dubs 'dubs' here means fees or salary. In this case it refers to extra fees against the income from sales of recordings, still a lively issue for actors and musicians in the 21st Century.
The little tyrant of his fields withstood,
Some mute inglorious Milton here may rest,
Some Cromwell, guiltless of his country's blood.
'We should like to have seen the Secretary of State's answer to Mr Pallant's question. It is, alas, lost, for the House went into hysterics, and nearly into the Gubby dance. If Mr Kipling reads The Justice of the Peace. and none can ever guess the limits of that omnivorous reader, he may be moved to tell us the answer.'Perhaps the truth is that Kipling had to invent an issue relating to Huckley, even a spurious one, for hysteria to strike the assembled legislators in the final scene.
[Page 211 line 8] a cross-bencher In the British Parliament, 'cross-benchers' are those peers (on the left in this photograph) in the House of Lords, who have renounced party ties and declared themselves politically neutral. They are termed crossbenchers because they sit on neither the government benches nor the opposition benches but on benches that are perpendicular to the other seats and face the Woolsack on which the Lord Chancellor sits.