Dr Hyacinth Morgan: Oh no.
Dr Hyacinth Morgan: Rich man.
Dr Hyacinth Morgan: The white man here does the same thing to the white worker.
Dr Hyacinth Morgan: How else can they get them?
Dr Hyacinth Morgan: A good excuse.
Dr Hyacinth Morgan: Not a bad idea.
Dr Hyacinth Morgan: There would be a rebellion if they did.
Dr Hyacinth Morgan: No, he will give higher salaries to useless Governors.
Dr Hyacinth Morgan: We shall be ready for the hon. Member.
Dr Hyacinth Morgan: No.
Dr Hyacinth Morgan: Why does the hon. Gentleman not do it in a courteous way?
Dr Hyacinth Morgan: We have been taking the wealth from those Colonies.
Dr Hyacinth Morgan: It will never materialise.
Dr Hyacinth Morgan: They do.
Dr Hyacinth Morgan: That is no answer.
Dr Hyacinth Morgan: That is something the hon. Member cannot do.
Dr Hyacinth Morgan: As the last speaker in this debate—
Dr Hyacinth Morgan: —I wish my hon. Friend had been a little quieter when he was making his own speech. I want to say quite frankly, as I have done on many of these colonial questions, that I am terrified when hon. Members start to address the House. No one in this House, except a very few hon. Members, seems to take in colonial problems of this kind that deep human interest that they take in questions...
Dr Hyacinth Morgan: I am and that it is my opinion of you and your comrades. I may be wrong, but at any rate I am frank enough to tell you to your face.
Dr Hyacinth Morgan: The hon. and learned Gentleman is very fluent in addressing the Chair and, of course, I would never dare to challenge his opinion. But I have heard his manner of address in this House and outside and I must say that I prefer to hear his language in this House than the sometimes rather crude language he uses outside. The circumstances in which I was brought up lead me to believe that his...