Best of
Politics

1909

The People's Rights


Winston S. Churchill - 1909
    Distilling the ideas and language of a series of brilliant speeches, Churchill created in The People's Rights a powerful plea for 'a great policy of social reconstruction and reorganization'.In the years before 1914, Churchill's energy an enthusiasm for radical schemes of social and constitutional reform were unquenchable. Political enemies and jealous colleagues sometimes dismissed his work as nothing more than the product of ambitious opportunism. But, opportunist and man of ambition though he was, he was nevertheless inspired by a profound concern for the welfare of the working population. Churchill supported and initiated Liberal reforms because he believed in them. None of his contemporaries in the Liberal cabinet delved more deeply into the underlying causes of contemporary political and social problems. Few could match his powers of argument and exposition in defence of Liberal principles on the platform.After sixty years, his unequivocal denunciations of the House of Lords ('a lingering relic of the feudal order'), 'the unnatural gap between rich and poor', 'the divorce of the people from the land', 'the swift increase of vulgar, joyless luxury', continue to command assent. 'Churchill', an eminent critic recently pronounced, 'had no vision of the future'. The People's Rights, forged in the furnace of controversy, eloquently contradicts this judgment. Three generations after its first appearance, its phrases can still move, its aspirations still challenge an imperfect society.Cameron Hazlehurst, a Research Fellow of Nuffield College, Oxford, contributes a short introduction on Churchill's early political ideas and the historical background to The People's Rights.

The case against socialism, plainly stated for the man in the street


William Beanland - 1909
    For example, in chapter 6: Socialism and the Family, we find the following:"The very first conception of a Socialistic State is such a relation of the sexes as shall prevent men and women from falling into selfish family groups. Family life is eternally at war with Socialistic life. When you have a private household you must have private property to feed it, hence a community of goods; the first idea of a Socialistic State has been found in every case to imply a community of children and to promote a community of wives."This IS a public domain work. Most editions you will find are unedited OCR versions that contain frequent errors, no formatting (like bold or italicized text) and large gaps where one page ends and the next begins. This version has been painstakingly restored.The original book can be found in the Internet Archive.

The Complete English Poems John Milton


Gordon Campbell - 1909
    All of Milton's English poems with an introduction by Gordon Campbell