This  is a key that will not only make perfect sense to many of you, but,  will also aid some of you who endeavour to triumph over legislative  contract tyranny. This comes from Page 988. Hope you find it useful. :) 
481. “Alteration.”
The British Constitution can be altered by an Act of the British Parliament.  
In  fact it is sometimes hard to distinguish between Acts passed by the  British Parliament relating to matters of ordinary legislation, and Acts  passed by it relating to the Constitution.  
The Federal  Parliament, however, is not authorised to amend the Constitution of the  Commonwealth. That Constitution can only be varied in a special way and  after compliance with certain formalities and prerequisites. 
In like manner the Congress of the United States is deprived of power to amend the American instrument of Government. The  disability of a Federal Legislature to alter the Federal Constitution  is one of the organic features and a prominent characteristic of every  federal system. 
If the Federal Legislature could change the  Constitution it might transform itself from a subordinate law-making  body into an organ of sovereignty; it might destroy the federal system  altogether, and substitute a consolidated form of government. 
A Federal  Legislature is a mere creature of the Federal Constitution; it is a mere  instrument or servant of a federal community; it is an agent, not a  master. 
The Constitution is the master of the legislature, and the community itself is the author of the Constitution. 
In  this respect a federal legislature differs from a supreme legislature  like that of Great Britain, which is the embodiment and essence of the  sovereignty of the British nation.
Sovereignty resides in that  person, or body, or class of persons in whom is ultimately vested the  power to amend a Constitution of Government.

 
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