The walls were covered with dingy, antiquated paper, and ornamented with coloured supplements from Christmas Numbers-there was a very patriotic picture of a soldier shaking the hand of a fallen comrade and waving his arm in defiance of a band of advancing Arabs; there was a 'Cherry Ripe,' almost black with age and dirt; there were two almanacks several years old, one with a coloured portrait of the Marquess of Lorne, very handsome and elegantly dressed, the object of Mrs. Kemp's adoration since her husband's demise; the other a Jubilee portrait of the Queen, somewhat losing in dignity by a moustache which Liza in an irreverent moment had smeared on with charcoal.
"Liza of Lambeth"
W. Somerset Maugham
19, 20; refuses Catholic emancipation, 196 Lorne, Archibald Campbell, Lord, v.
"History of the English People, Index"
John Richard Green
On the other hand, when the Princess Louise was betrothed to the Marquis of Lorne, Mr. Gladstone stated in the House of Commons that the marriage with a subject had not been decided upon without the advice of the ministers of the Crown.
"The Government of England (Vol. I)"
A. Lawrence Lowell