"I think I could not offer a greater offence to my Conservative friends here or anywhere than to tell them that they are not a progressive party. They may not have agreed to the demand for revolutionary changes in the past, but they have been in a special sense—and it cannot be denied by any fair critic—the great apostles of social reform. And who was their teacher? Who was their leader? It was Mr. Disraeli, who laid the seeds of his doctrine in his great novel Sybil. Though he found his party slow to educate, they made such progress under his guidance, and under the subsequent guidance of Lord Randolph Churchill and others, that they have now arrived at a position in which they may fairly claim that it is to their efforts and to their legislation that the great social reforms now impressed upon the Statute-book of this country are due."
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Prime Ministers of the United KingdomPoliticians from EnglandNovelists from EnglandEssayists from EnglandJews from the United Kingdom
Original Language: English
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Sources
Joseph Chamberlain, speech to the Manchester Liberal Unionist Association (17 November 1898), quoted in The Times (18 November 1898), p. 12
https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Benjamin_Disraeli
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Benjamin Disraeli
1804 – 1881
britischer Politiker
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