Articles Lucy wrote many articles for
Punch,
The Strand Magazine, ''
Harper's Magazine, Cornhill Magazine, The New York Times'' and others. Some of these are noted below. • "Mr. Gladstone at Hawarden" (1882) Online version at
Cornell University Library • "Glimpses Of Great Britons" (1882) Online version at
Cornell University Library • "Hatfield House and the Marquess of Salisbury" (1885) Online version at
Cornell University Library • "Men of the Salisbury Parliament" (1891) Online version at
Cornell University Library • "Electioneering methods in England" (1892) Online version at
Cornell University Library • "The Power of the British Press" (1896) Online version at
Cornell University Library • "The Queen's Parliaments, Part I" (1897) Online version at
Cornell University Library • "The Queen's Parliaments, Part II" (1897) Online version at
Cornell University Library Autobiographies Lucy wrote two
autobiographies, each in three volumes:
Sixty Years in the Wilderness • Volume I
Some Passages by the Way (1909) Online version at the
Internet Archive • Volume II
More Passages by the Way (1912) Online version at the
Internet Archive • Volume III "
Nearing Jordan (1916) Online version at the
Internet Archive The Diary of a Journalist • Volume I (1920) Online version at the
Internet Archive • Volume II
Later Entries (1922) Online version at the
Internet Archive • Volume III
Fresh Extracts (1923)
Pseudonyms On occasion Lucy used one of the following
pseudonyms for his works. • Toby, M.P. • The Member for the Chiltern Hundreds • The Member for
Barks • Baron de Book-Worms
Books Lucy wrote a number of books: •
Gideon Fleyce [novel] (1883) Online version at the
Internet Archive •
East by West: a journey in the Recess (1885) Online version at the
Internet Archive •
A Diary Of Two Parliaments: The Disraeli Parliament, 1874-1880 (1885) Online version at the
Internet Archive •
A Diary Of Two Parliaments: The Gladstone Parliament, 1880-1885 (1886) Online version at the
Internet Archive •
A Popular Handbook of Parliamentary Procedure (1886) Online version at the
Internet Archive •
Faces and Places (1892) Online version at
Project Gutenberg •
A Diary of the Salisbury Parliament, 1886-1892 (1892) Online version at the
Internet Archive •
The Right Honourable W. E. Gladstone: A Study from Life (1895) Online version at the
Internet Archive •
A Diary of the Home Rule Parliament, 1892-1895 (1896) Online version at the
Internet Archive •
The Log of the Tantallon Castle (1896) • ''The Miller's Niece, and some distant connections'' [short stories] (1896) •
The Law and Practice of General Elections: A Popular Handbook (1900) •
A Diary of the Unionist Parliament, 1895-1900 (1901) Online version at the
Internet Archive • ''Peeps at Parliament, taken from behind the Speaker's Chair'' (1904) Online version at the
Internet Archive • ''Later peeps at Parliament, taken from behind the Speaker's Chair'' (1905) Online version at the
Internet Archive •
The Balfourian Parliament, 1900–1905 (1906) Online version at the
Internet Archive •
Memories of Eight Parliaments (1908) Online version at the
Internet Archive •
Men and Manner in Parliament (1919) Online version at the
Internet Archive •
Lords and Commoners (1921) Online version at the
Internet Archive Quotes Lucy's analytical observations of the Conservative antagonist
Benjamin Disraeli were characteristic: The physical energy with which this election speech was delivered was certainly very remarkable for a man in his seventy-fourth year. There is, however, unmistakeable evidence of pumping up in the Premier's (
Beaconsfield's) latest oratorical feats. The vigour is spasmodic, the strength artificial, and the listener has a feeling that at any moment a spring may break, a screw go loose, and the whole machinery come to a sudden stop. Remarking on the Liberal counterpart's performance in the chamber, he sensed that
Gladstone's
tours de force are perfectly natural. When after one of his great speeches he resumes his seat, he is, and often proves himself to be, ready to start again. With the Premier, the excitement of the moment over and the appointed task achieved, he falls into a state of prostration painful to witness. His eyes seem to lose all expression, his cheeks fall in, and his face takes on a ghastly hue. Physically he is at least ten years older than Gladstone. The House of Commons is unique in many ways. I believe the main foundation of the position it holds among the parliaments of the world is the condition of volunteered unremunerated service. In spite of the sneers from disappointed or flippant persons, a seat in the House of Commons remains one of the highest prizes of citizen life. There is no reason why any constituency desiring to do so may not return a member on the terms of paying him a salary. It is done in several cases, in two at least with the happiest results. It would be a different thing to throw the whole place open with standing advertisement for eligible Members at a salary. The horde of impecunious babblers and busybodies attracted by such a bait would trample down the class of man who compose the present House of Commons and who are, in various ways, in touch with all the multiform interests of the nation.
The Strand Magazine, 1893 I would rather have been editor of
Punch, than Emperor of India Yesterday
Herbert Spencer died at Brighton. His natural temperament was such that many things that other men got along with placidly gave him acute pain. To put the incontestable fact another way, he was perhaps the most irascible man who has ever been faced by the inconvenience of other people presuming to inhabit the same globe ==Notes==