[62-1] Recourse to the grave process of impeachment lies outside normal procedure and is here disregarded.
[62-2] Cf. post, p. 113 et seq.
[63-1] Ency. Brit., vol. xvii. pp. 315, 317; but also cf. ibid., vol. ix. p. 488: "It was the first of the many occasions in English history when the demand for reform took the shape of a reference back to old precedents, and now (as on all subsequent occasions) the party which opposed the crown read back into the ancient grants which they quoted a good deal more than had been actually conceded in them."
[65-1] W.H. Taft, Popular Government, New Haven, Connecticut, 1913, p. 155.
[65-2] The exception to this statement is apparent in the British Isles, where suffrage is a national affair, and no federal framework affords a basis for local option on this privilege.
[66-1] Springfield (Massachusetts) Weekly Republican, November 20, 1913.
[67-1] W. B. Worsfold, The Union of South Africa, London, 1912, p. 126.
[67-2] Ibid., pp. 139-140.
[67-3] An Analysis of the System of Government throughout the British Empire, London, 1912, p. 44.
[68-1] An Analysis of the System of Government throughout the British Empire, London, 1912, pp. 44-45.