This printed record of parliamentary
This printed record of parliamentary affairs came out in 1641, and was entitled _The_Diurnal_Occurrences,_or_Daily_Proceedings_of_both_Houses_in_this_great_and_happy_Parliament,_from_the_3d_of_November,_1640,_to_the_3d_of_November,_1641._ The speeches delivered from the first date down to the following June were also published in two volumes, and in 1642 weekly instalments appeared under various titles, such as _The_Heads_of_all_the_Proceedings_of_both_Houses_of_Parliament-Account_of_Proceedings_of_both_Houses_of_Parliament-A_perfect_Diurnal_of_the_Passages_in_Parliament_, etc., etc. There was no reporter's gallery in those days, and the Parliament only printed _what_they_pleased_ ; still this was a step in the right direction. After Parliaments occasionally evinced bitter hostility toward the press, but that which boasted Sawyer Lenthal for its speaker was its friend (at all events, at first, though afterward, as we shall notice by and by, it displayed some animosity against its early _protege_), and from this meagre beginning took its rise that which is beyond doubt one of the most important domestic functions of the press at the present day.
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ten upon one of its bloodiest
THE ENGLISH PRESS II It
Then she pointed to me
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New York Carlton publisher 413
A facetious friend who loves
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