SIR C. DILKE'S MOTION
... 1. THE speech of Sir C. Dilke last night, still aIt more than that of the Marquis of Lansdowne on re-Tuesday night, Look the unhappy aspect of all ed attack on an absent man who, whatever error Sir he may have committed, is certainly in a better Lc- position than his critics to know what he has a BS9 been about ; and who has, at all events, never he laid himself open to the accusation which ...