Publisher's Synopsis
Excerpt from The Law and Custom of the Constitution, Vol. 1 of 3
There is a third method, that which I have adopted, and I think that it o?'ers the most ungrateful task of the three. I have tried to describe these institutions with enough history to explain their existence, and enough of their working to show what they are intended to do.
Necessarily I have been obliged to enter into details some of which are dry and wearisome to the reader. Often I fear that I may not have observed a due proportion between the history of an institution and its present state. The history of the Government departments has yet to be written, but those of our institutions which are less definite in character - the Cabinet, the Prime Minister - must be treated historically if they are to be treated at all; for the present, in these cases, is a dissolving view; the changes are constant, often almost imperceptible, but nevertheless very real.
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