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LORD RANDOLPH CHURCHILL by Winston Spencer Churchill Kindle Edition
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IN the spring of 1893 Lord Randolph Churchill, feeling that he had slender expectations of long life, placed all his papers, private and official, under a trust-deed which consigned them at his death to the charge of two of his most intimate political friends, Viscount Curzon (now Earl Howe) and Mr. Ernest Beckett (now Lord Grimthorpe). As he made a practice of preserving almost every letter he received, the number of documents was sufficient to fill eleven considerable tin boxes. Subject to the conditions prescribed in the trust-deed in regard to matters affecting the India Office or the Foreign Office—which have, of course, been strictly observed—these papers were placed in my hands by my father’s literary executors in July 1902, for the purpose of my writing a full account of his life and work. I am deeply sensible of the confidence implied and of the honour conveyed in that commission, and during the three and a half years which have passed since I accepted it, I have diligently laboured—in spite of some political distractions—to discharge it to the best of my ability.
Sir Michael Hicks-Beach (having consulted with the late Lord Salisbury) and Lord Rosebery have expressed the opinion that the story of Lord Randolph Churchill’s life may now be fully told without impropriety towards individuals or the public. Indeed, it is high time to do so. Lord Randolph’s part in national affairs is not to be measured by long years of office. No great legislation stands in his name upon the statute book. He was a Chancellor of the Exchequer without a Budget, a Leader of the House of Commons but for a single session, a victor without the spoils. No tangible or enduring records—unless it be the Burma province—exist of his labours, and the great and decisive force which he exerted upon the history of the Conservative and Unionist party might be imperfectly realised by a later generation, unless it were explained, asserted, and confirmed by the evidence of those who came in contact or collision with his imperious and vivifying personality.
For a thing so commonly attempted, political biography is difficult. The style and ideas of the writer must throughout be subordinated to the necessity of embracing in the text those documentary proofs upon which the story depends. Letters, memoranda, and extracts from speeches, which inevitably and rightly interrupt the sequence of his narrative, must be pieced together upon some consistent and harmonious plan. It is not by the soft touches of a picture, but in hard mosaic or tessellated pavement, that a man’s life and fortunes must be presented in all their reality and romance. I have thought it my duty, so far as possible, to assemble once and for all the whole body of historical evidence required for the understanding of Lord Randolph Churchill’s career. Scarcely anything of material consequence has been omitted, and such omissions as have been necessary are made for others’ sakes and not his own. Scarcely any statement of importance lacks documentary proof. There is nothing more to tell. Wherever practicable I have endeavoured to employ his own words in the narration; and the public is now in a position to pronounce a complete, if not a final, judgment.
I have been fortunate in the abundance of the materials supplied me. In addition to Lord Randolph Churchill’s tin boxes with their ample stores, there was at hand an invaluable series of scrap-books, containing every conceivable newspaper comment and cartoon, collected by his sister, Lady Wimborne, and covering the whole period of his active political life. But most of all I am indebted to those many friends, irrespective of political party, who either by allowing their letters to be printed, or by reading the proof-sheets, have enabled me to compile what may, without presumption, be called an authoritative account. I accept, of course, in the fullest sense, exclusive responsibility for
- LanguageEnglish
- Publication dateJune 27, 2013
- File size2046 KB
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Product details
- ASIN : B00DP7HZL2
- Publication date : June 27, 2013
- Language : English
- File size : 2046 KB
- Simultaneous device usage : Unlimited
- Text-to-Speech : Enabled
- Screen Reader : Supported
- Enhanced typesetting : Enabled
- X-Ray : Not Enabled
- Word Wise : Enabled
- Sticky notes : On Kindle Scribe
- Print length : 247 pages
- Page numbers source ISBN : 1502414538
- Best Sellers Rank: #2,142,791 in Kindle Store (See Top 100 in Kindle Store)
- #4,093 in Biographies of Political Leaders
- #13,946 in Historical Biographies (Kindle Store)
- #15,917 in Political Leader Biographies
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

Winston S. Churchill (1874-1965) has been called 'the greatest Briton'. An international statesman, orator, biographer, historian, author and Nobel Prize winner, his works remain in print with the world's leading publishers.
Educated at Harrow and Sandhurst, Winston spent several years in the army before becoming a newspaper correspondent and then an MP. His cabinet positions included First Lord of the Admiralty at the outbreak of the First World War and later Chancellor of the Exchequer.
Churchill became Prime Minister in 1940 and for five years led Britain though its 'finest hour'. Defeated in the July 1945 election, he was Leader of the Opposition until re-elected Prime Minister in 1951. He was knighted in 1953, the same year he was awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature. He stepped down as Prime Minister in 1955 and remained an MP until 1964.
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If you're looking for action reading ... these are not your books. If you're looking to understand Winston Churchill, British history and party politics a little better ... give this (2 volumes) a try. While a little uneven, some of the writing is brilliant ... a precursor of Winston Churchill's later masterpieces.
Unfortunately, this edition of the book takes all the joy out of reading it. It is, as far as I can tell, a print-on-demand version made from a computer scan of the original two-volume text. In order to fit it into one rather thin volume (approx. 300 pages) it is printed in nearly unreadable 8-point type, which will strain all but the strongest eyes. Due to the vagaries of the scan/print process, there are random blank spaces spread here and there through the book, and dozens of places where the spaces between words are missing. Much of the text consists of quotations from letters written by Lord Randolph, but the computer reprint omits the indentations showing where these quotations begin and end, so that it is very difficult to tell where the Lord Randolph's letters end and Winston's text resumes. The original had numerous illustrations, including many cartoons from the British magazine Punch. These illustrations do not appear in this edition - but their captions remain, hanging by themselves in the middle of pages. And what the computer process has done to the potentially valuable index must be seen to be believed.
I can strongly recommend the original book - both volumes - to anyone interested in Winston Churchill, his father, or the history of Britain in this fascinating period. But spend a bit more money and find a decent, readable edition. Don't waste your money or your time on this virtually unreadable mashup of an important historical work.

