Origins in Scripture and Lincoln’s Warning
The phrase originates in Christian scripture, where accounts in the Gospels use the image of a divided house to illustrate the self-defeating nature of internal conflict. Lincoln adapted that language in 1858 in a speech accepting the Republican nomination for the U.S. Senate. In the context of escalating disputes over the expansion of slavery, he argued the country could not endure permanently half slave and half free, predicting that it would resolve one way or the other. While he lost that Senate race, the speech elevated the moral and structural stakes of the crisis and foreshadowed the national rupture that followed.
A Rhetorical Touchstone Across Eras
Since the 19th century, the phrase has surfaced at junctures of perceived fracture: during Reconstruction debates over federal authority, in 20th-century conflicts about civil rights, and in foreign policy arguments over alliances and ideological contests. In each phase, advocates deployed it to argue that internal disputes threatened the credibility or capacity of the state. The words have been used by centrists seeking compromise, by reformers pressing for structural change, and by incumbents urging order.
From Knight-Errant To Outlaw Lord
Beric Dondarrion is the house's most recognizable scion. Introduced as a charismatic young lord tasked with a crown-sanctioned mission, he becomes something far more complicated: the head of the Brotherhood Without Banners, a guerilla force fighting in the name of the smallfolk against the depredations of warlords and mercenaries. His arc turns the lightning on the Dondarrion sigil into a moral question: what does swift justice mean when courts have vanished and kings' words carry little weight?
Life After Registration: Ongoing Duties
Registration isn’t the finish line; it’s the starting gate. You’ll receive a UK establishment number and your details appear on the public register. Keep them fresh. If directors change, your constitutional documents are amended, your UK address moves, or your company name updates, notify Companies House promptly. There are short statutory windows—treat changes as “file it now,” not “file it later.”
Tax, Payroll, and the HMRC Side
Companies House registration and UK tax are separate tracks. If your UK establishment amounts to a permanent establishment for tax purposes (often the case with a staffed office), HMRC will expect a corporation tax registration and a UK tax return on profits attributable to the UK presence. Transfer pricing will shape how much profit lands in the UK versus the head office—document your pricing and intercompany recharges.
Menu Moves on a Budget (or When You Want Just Enough)
Midnight hunger has a way of pretending to be fancier than your wallet. No problem—there are easy moves. Start by building from sides: eggs the way you like them, a small hashbrown upgraded with one or two toppings, and a single waffle to split. That combo hits all the notes without overdoing it. If you’re more savory, swap the waffle for toast or a biscuit and lean into the griddle. You can also share a bigger plate and add one extra side so everyone gets a bite they love.
Why It Hits Different After Midnight
It’s not just the food. Don’t get me wrong: the waffle crunch-to-fluff ratio is a small miracle, and the hashbrowns are borderline spiritual at the right hour. But what really lands is the feeling. Late-night Waffle House is a third place that doesn’t demand anything from you. The rules are simple: come as you are, be decent, and enjoy the moment. You can be between destinations, between ideas, or between moods—and still feel at home. It’s the rare spot where strangers share a soundtrack and a few quiet nods of solidarity.