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Lord Salisbury on Politics
A selection from his articles in the Quarterly Review, 1860-1883

A selection of Lord Salisbury's articles in the Quarterly Review.

Paul Smith (Edited by)

9780521044578, Cambridge University Press

Paperback / softback, published 29 November 2007

396 pages
21.5 x 14 x 2.3 cm, 0.519 kg

Leader of the Conservative party for seventeen years and prime minister for fourteen, the third Marquis of Salisbury was one of the most successful political practitioners of modern times, as well as a major international statesman. Yet he was also a prolific and pungent writer on politics. The large body of journalism which he produced during the first thirty years of his career enables us to examine in detail the views on politics and society which underlay his practical action. While his brand of Conservatism was conventional in its conclusions, it was distinguished by the highly sceptical and utilitarian mode of reasoning through which it sought to reach them, and by its insistence on a crudely conceived class struggle as the driving force of history and politics. Its central theme was hostility to 'democracy'; and when, after 1867, 'democracy' seemed to have arrived, it questioned how far the system of parliamentary government could work tolerably under the new dispensation.

Preface
List of abbreviations
Editor's introduction
Bibliographical note
1. 'The Budget and the Reform Bill' (April 1860)
2. 'The House of Commons' (July 1864)
3. 'The Reform Bill' (April 1866)
4. 'The Change of Ministry' (July 1866)
5. 'The Conservative Surrender' (October 1867)
6. 'The Programme of the Radicals' (October 1873)
7. 'Disintegration' (October 1883)
Index.

Subject Areas: Politics & government [JP]

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