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Prime Ministers and Some Others: A Book of Reminiscences

Prime Ministers and Some Others: A Book of Reminiscences

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Chapter 1 LORD PALMERSTON

Word Count: 1306    |    Released on: 01/12/2017

tual ghosts of former greatness, yet still touched by that human infirmity which prefers praise to blame. It will behove me to walk warily

r of the two Houses of Parliament; so I may be fairly said to have the Parliamentary tradition in my blood. But I cannot profess to have taken any intelligent interest in

ther distorted feet-"each foot, to describe it mathematically, was a four-sided irregular figure"-his strong and comfortable seat on the old white hack which carried him daily to the House of Commons. L

often heard Palmerston speak. I remember his abrupt, jerky, rather "bow-wow"-like style, full of "hums" and "hahs"; and the sort of good-te

ance of a speech; so, for a frank estimate of Palmerston's policy at the period which I am d

parties laugh at one another; the Tories at the Liberals, by his defeating all Liberal measures; the Liberals at the Tories, by their consciousness of getting everything that is to be got in Church and State; an

erhaps because it did not end with his death-is the estimation in which he was h

s born and bred a Tory, and from 1807 to 1830 held office in Tory Administrations. The remaining thirty-five years of his life he spent, for the most part, in Whig Administrations, but a Whig he was not. The one thing in the world which he loved supremely was power, and, as long as this was secured, he did

orror. His bearing towards the Queen, who abhorred him-not without good reason-was considered to be lamentably lacking in that ceremonious respect for the Crown which the Whigs always maintained even when they were dethroning Kings. Disraeli likened his manner to that of "a favourite footman on easy terms with his mistress," and one who was in official relations with him wrote: "He

took a pacirc;té; afterwards he was helped to two very greasy-looking entrées; he then despatched a plate of roast mutton; there then appeared before him the largest, and to my mind the hardest, slice of ham that ever figured on the table of a nobleman, yet it disappeared just in time to answer the enquiry of the butler, 'Snipe or pheasant, my lord?' He instantly replied, 'Pheasant,' thus completing his ninth dish of meat at that meal.

Afterwards Lo

to the statesman who, as Lord John Russell, had been her Prime Minister twenty years before, and who, as Earl Russell, had been for the last six years Foreign Secretary in Palmerston

his uncle's nephew." He has made a much better job of his task than I have made of mine; and yet I have never been indifferent to the fact that I

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1 Chapter 1 LORD PALMERSTON2 Chapter 2 LORD RUSSELL3 Chapter 3 LORD DERBY4 Chapter 4 BENJAMIN DISRAEI5 Chapter 5 WILLIAM EWART GLADSTONE6 Chapter 6 LORD SALISBURY7 Chapter 7 LORD ROSEBERY8 Chapter 8 AUTHUR JAMES BALFOUR9 Chapter 9 HENRY CAMPBELL-BANNERMAN10 Chapter 10 GLADSTONE-AFTER TWENTY YEARS11 Chapter 11 HENRY SCOTT HOLLAND[ ]12 Chapter 12 LORD HALIFAX13 Chapter 13 LORD AND LADY RIPON[ ]14 Chapter 14 FREDDY LEVESON 15 Chapter 15 SAMUEL WHITBREAD16 Chapter 16 HENRY MONTAGU BUTLER17 Chapter 17 BASIL WILBERFORCE[ ]18 Chapter 18 EDITH SICHEL19 Chapter 19 WILL GLADSTONE20 Chapter 20 LORD CHARLES RUSSELL21 Chapter 21 A STRANGE EPIPHANY22 Chapter 22 THE ROMANCE OF RENUNCIATION23 Chapter 23 PAN-ANGLICANISM24 Chapter 24 LIFE AND LIBERTY25 Chapter 25 LOVE AND PUNISHMENT26 Chapter 26 HATRED AND LOVE27 Chapter 27 THE TRIUMPHS OF ENDURANCE28 Chapter 28 A SOLEMN FARCE29 Chapter 29 MIRAGE30 Chapter 30 MIST31 Chapter 31 DISSOLVING THROES 32 Chapter 32 INSTITUTIONS AND CHARACTER33 Chapter 33 REVOLUTION-AND RATIONS34 Chapter 34 THE INCOMPATIBLES 35 Chapter 35 FREEDOM'S NEW FRIENDS36 Chapter 36 EDUCATION AND THE JUDGE37 Chapter 37 THE GOLDEN LADDER38 Chapter 38 OASES39 Chapter 39 LIFE, LIBERTY, AND JUSTICE40 Chapter 40 THE STATE AND THE BOY41 Chapter 41 A PLEA FOR THE INNOCENTS42 Chapter 42 THE HUMOROUS STAGE 43 Chapter 43 THE JEWISH REGIMENT44 Chapter 44 INDURATION45 Chapter 45 FLACCIDITY46 Chapter 46 THE PROMISE OF MAY47 Chapter 47 PAGEANTRY AND PATRIOTISM48 Chapter 48 A FORGOTTEN PANIC49 Chapter 49 A CRIMEAN EPISODE