Robert Collier, 3rd Baron Monkswell

He was one of 112 peers (known as the "diehards") to vote against the Parliament Act 1911 in the House of Lords.

[2] Ezra Pound accused Lord Monkswell of displaying arrogance in his faith in capitalism, in an article he penned for The Globe in its last issue of 1919.

Monkswell is quoted as writing there, "A man without any tools can produce nothing" to which Pound replied, in The New Age Vol.

26 #12, January 22, 1920, "Loophole being that one can make poems out of mere words, and that many have done so; but lacking speech one can say nothing".

During the General Strike of 1926, Lord Monkswell worked as a signalman at Marylebone Railway Station.