Thereafter, it was storekeeper Lincoln's pocketborough; its ruffians were his body-guard.
2
The Flats, mind you; our own little pocketborough of the Flats!
3
O'Donnell says it probably originated in that Banagher was a pocketborough notorious for its parliamentary corruption.
4
Sir Robert Peel began in the pocketborough of Cashel in 1809, a coming-of-age present from his mill-owning father.
5
Fox first entered Parliament for the pocketborough of Midhurst, and Sir George Trevelyan has described how it took place.
6
Too often a political office was granted from a pocketborough in which a restricted electorate could be bought at a trifling expense.
7
Let 'em quash every pocketborough to-morrow, and bring in every mushroom town in the kingdom-they'llonly increase the expense of getting into Parliament.
8
Tillietudlem was no poor pocketborough to be disposed of, this way or that way, according to the caprice or venal call of some aristocrat.
9
Saint Cuthman and his mother-Steyning'sarchitecture-Steyning'swise passiveness-Bramber castle-A corrupt pocketborough-A Taxidermist-humorist-Joseph Poorgrass in Sussex-The widow of Beeding and the Romney-A digression on curio-hunting
10
Such towns were called "rotten boroughs," " pocketboroughs," "nomination boroughs."
11
Preston was often represented in Parliament by a Stanley, and was looked upon as a PocketBorough.
12
In spite of pocketboroughs, family influence, and flagrant corruption, the reformers came back to Parliament with their majority increased to fully one hundred.