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The tenth and eleventh volumes of Gladstone's diaries (1881-1886)
cover the years of his dramatic second and third administrations.
The second administration confronted a series of crises: the Land
League Campaign and the Phoenix Park murders, Majuba Hill and South
Africa, Gordon and the Sudan, and the obstruction of franchise
reform by the House of Lords. The administration met these with
determined assertion of administrative and legislative reforms,
more coherent in policy and more consistent in practice than is
often realized. Gladstone's third administration in 1886 attempted
to pacify Ireland by granting Home Rule and in doing so provided
one of the most exciting and controversial twelve months in British
politics since the Civil War. These volumes include not only the
daily text of Gladstone's private diaries (maintained almost
without a break) but also all of his Cabinet Minutes, hitherto
unpublished and themselves a remarkable, and for the Victorian
period, unique diary of decision-making. There are over 1400 of the
letters (the vast majority hitherto unpublished) which he wrote in
those years. These letters flesh out the daily diary and the
Cabinet Minutes, and cover the Church, the Queen and the Court,
literature, theatre, art, and domestic affairs. There is much
material in these volumes on Gladstone's unsuccessful but repeated
attempts to retire from political office. The volumes offer an
extraordinary narrative of great force, a remarkable mixture of
achievement and disappointment, of bold legislation and
administrative and political disasters. They display some of the
innermost thoughts of an astonishing political personality which
mesmerized contemporaries and has continued to fascinate historians
and general readers.
Volume XIV contains comprehensive indexes to the entire thirteen
volumes of W.E. Gladstone's diaries, comprising the Index of
Persons, the Subject Index, and the Index of Gladstone's Reading.
It is effectively an index to most of British public life from 1830
to 1896.
The last two volumes of Gladstone's diaries depict the
extraordinary energy of a remarkable octogenarian: Gladstone was
eighty-four when he resigned the Premiership in 1894 to close his
fourth administration. His pursuit of `justice for Ireland' through
the successful passage of a Home Rule Bill through the Commons in
1893 forms the political centrepiece of these volumes. But there is
also a wealth of material on imperial, foreign, domestic, and
religious politics contained in the daily diary enteries, the
minutes of the Cabinets of the 1892-4 government, and the five
hundred letters which accompany the enteries for the governmental
period. Gladstone's life-style made few concessions to his age: his
reading, writing, theatre-going, and trips abroad continue, as do
his speech-writing and his church-going. His declining eyesight
eventually curtailed his reading and led to the end of regular
diary-writing in 1894. His vast diary, which he began in 1825, ends
in 1896. Its final entries are a moving conclusion to one of the
most remarkable and one the most curious documents of British
history.
The last two volumes of Gladstone's diaries depict the
extraordinary energy of a remarkable octogenarian: Gladstone was
eighty-four when he resigned the Premiership in 1894 to close his
fourth administration. His pursuit of 'justice for Ireland' through
the successful passage of a Home Rule Bill through the Commons in
1893 forms the political centrepiece of these volumes. But there is
also a wealth of material on imperial, foreign, domestic, and
religious politics contained in the daily diary entries, the
minutes of the Cabinets of the 1892-4 government, and the five
hundred letters which accompany the entries for the governmental
period. Gladstone's life-style made few concessions to his age: his
reading, writing, theatre-going, and trips abroad continue, as do
his speech-making and his church-going. His declining eyesight
eventually curtailed his reading and led to the end of regular
diary-writing in 1894. His vast diary, which he began in 1825, ends
in 1896. Its final entries are a moving conclusion to one of the
most remarkable and one of the most curious documents of British
history.
The index to the thirteen text volumes of The Gladstone Diaries
1825-1896 has three parts. First `Dramatis Personae', a list of the
20,500 people mentioned by Gladstone in his diaries. Secondly
`Gladstone's Lifetime Reading', a bibliography of the 20,000 books,
pamphlets, and articles, whose reading he records in his diaries,
with the dates when he read them. This is a bibliography of
remarkable cultural interest. It is probably the most ambitious
attempt by a public figure to note his or her reading and it is
certainly unique as a printed record of the lifetime's reading of
am eminent Briton. Thirdly, a `Subject Index' which is the reader's
most direct way into the extraordinary range of subjects covered in
the thirteen text volumes. It is effectively an index to most of
British public life from 1830 until 1896. About two hundred of the
people who figure most prominently in the diaries are included in
the Subject Index (in addition to the `Dramatis Personae') with
detailed analytic entries. It also includes a bibliography of
Gladstone's own writings as he recorded them in his diaries. This
is a culmination of H. C. G. Matthew's acclaimed edition of
Gladstone's diaries, correspondence, and other papers. It is an
invaluable reference tool and an essential key to a magisterial
work of scholarship.
The tenth and eleventh volumes of Gladstone's Diaries cover the
years of his extraordinary second and third administrations. There
is much new material on the occupation of Egypt, the scramble for
Africa', the third Reform Bill, and the crisis in Ireland leading
eventually to the proposed Home Rule settlement in 1886 and the
split of the Liberal Party.
The volumes include not only the daily text of Gladstone's personal
diary for these years, but also the minutes that he kept of his
Cabinets - over 250 in these volumes - and over 1400 of the letters
on politics, religion, literature, and personal affairs which he
wrote in these years.
The editors long introduction offers an interpretation of this
remarkable material and in itself constitutes an important
contribution to our understanding of Victorian Britain. The
governments of the 1880s are the most controversial of Gladstone's
career. These two volumes - both in the quality and the quantity of
the material they contain - vastly increase our knowledge of
late-Victorian government and politics and will be an essential
source for many generations of historians.
The ninth volume of this major scholarly achievement covers some of
the most dramatic years of Gladstone's eventful life: his political
retirement, his return to lead the Bulgarian and Midlothian
Campaigns against Disraeli's government, his recapture of power in
1880, and the crisis-ridden early months of his second government.
Gladstone's daily diary, his personal correspondence, and the
Cabinet Minutes, here published for the first time, offer a wealth
of new insight into Gladstone's travels, interests, family, and
business affairs as well as into the remarkable sequence of
political events of his day.
Volume XIV contains comprehensive indexes to the entire thirteen
volumes of W.E. Gladstone's diaries, comprising the Index of
Persons, the Subject Index, and the Index of Gladstone's Reading.
It is effectively an index to most of British public life from 1830
to 1896.
Heinrich Schliemann (1822 1890) published Mycenae, an account of
his archaeological excavations of the ancient Greek cities of
Mycenae and Tiryns, in 1878. Schliemann's astonishing finds
revealed that the cities had a historical reality outside Homeric
epic. His excavations uncovered many priceless treasures, most
famously the 'death mask of Agamemnon' and the shaft graves, filled
with pottery, carved stones, skeletons, gold, jewellery and
weaponry. He also uncovered much about the layout and architecture
of the two lost cities. The volume is generously illustrated with
images of artefacts, maps and charts. It is introduced by W. E.
Gladstone, who gave Schliemann the political assistance necessary
for the excavations to take place. Schliemann's discoveries were
met with wild enthusiasm, and while today his methods of excavation
are deplored and many of his conclusions thought to be ill-founded,
he is rightly credited with the discovery of the lost and ancient
Mycenaean civilisation.
Agatha Ramm's two volumes containing correspondence between
Gladstone and his Foreign Secretary, Lord Granville, conducted at
the height of British colonial power during the years 1868-1876,
were published originally in 1952. This correspondence is now
available in a single volume, and lends the mass of government
papers usually studied by historians 'the enlivening touch'. The
correspondence contained in the volumes is between two men who
wrote to each other privately, but about matters which were, as
Professor Matthew states in his introduction, 'the very stuff of
official diplomatic exchange'. It also deals with the period of
opposition during Disraeli's government of 1874-1880, as well as a
wide range of non-political matters, in which the two men were
active whether in or out of government. This Reprint gives the
reader a valuable insight into the two correspondents and will,
therefore, be of great interest to scholars of British history.
This Reprint contains private correspondence between Gladstone and his Foreign Secretary, Lord Granville, conducted during the years 1868-1876. The correspondence is between two men who wrote to each other privately, but about matters which were, as Professor Matthew states in his supplementary introduction, "the very stuff of official diplomatic exchange." Edited with full scholarly rigor the correspondence sheds light on the details of foreign policy at a time when Britain was at the height of her power, as well as on a wide range of nonpolitical matters.
This collection of literature attempts to compile many of the
classic, timeless works that have stood the test of time and offer
them at a reduced, affordable price, in an attractive volume so
that everyone can enjoy them.
Written by his son, this literary work tells the story of Mr.
Gladstone's life. He attempts to present a true and complete
picture of his father's personality, as most other writers had
presented an untrue picture of his father, thus transforming the
man into what is repellent and untrue. The author gives his own
views of Mr. Gladstone from his own personal knowledge, records and
experience. He admits at possessing no skill at writing or
composing books, but facts are facts.
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