"Pitt's reputation would have been less decisive had not it contrasted so pointedly with the public image of his main rival. Indeed, it is not easy to explain why a man, so attractive in his private circle, should have been so distrusted by the public at large. It would be too simple to see Fox as the victim of unrelenting propaganda. Paragraph after paragraph, it is true, dwelt on his debts, his gambling, his love affairs, and reminded readers that his father had once been called "the public defaulter of unaccounted millions". The accusation of "Cromwell" was particularly effective. It was reported to be the "received notion among the inferiors" in Yorkshire that Fox was "attempting to dethrone the King and make himself an Oliver Cromwell". In Lancashire the name of Fox was said to be "most universally execrated", and in Gloucestershire "the Good Women and the Mob" exclaimed against him and the India bill "with an honest vehemence that will not permit them to discriminate between the Minister and the Man". But he was hounded in this way because he was peculiarly vulnerable, and because the public was prepared to believe the worst of him."
Quote Details
Added by wikiquote-import-bot
Unverified quote
0 likes
AbolitionistsMembers of the Parliament of Great BritainPeople from LondonWhig (British political party) politiciansSecretaries of State for Foreign Affairs of Great Britain and the United Kingdom
Original Language: English
Available Languages (1)
Sources
John Cannon, The Fox–North Coalition: Crisis of the Constitution, 1782–4 (1969), pp. 231-232
https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Charles_James_Fox
Revision History
No revisions have been submitted for this quote.
Categories
Charles James Fox
1749 – 1806
englischer Staatsmann und Rhetoriker
99 quotes on TrueQuotesView all quotes by Charles James Fox →
Related Quotes
"What is that fat gentleman in such a passion about?"
"[Fox] exhibited two pictures of this country; the one representing her at the end of the last glorious war, the other…"
"[T]he question now was, whether the British constitution, "that beautiful fabric, raised by the steadiness of our anc…"
"The war of the Americans is a war of passion; it is of such a nature as to be supported by the most powerful virtues,…"
"...against which we should direct all our force, the navy of France: in the destruction of her marine we might see so…"
"There is no man who hates the power of the crown more, or who has a worse opinion of the Person to whom it belongs th…"
"Kings, Sir, govern by means of popular assemblies, only because they cannot do without them; to suppose a king fond o…"
"Gentlemen, the malicious and groundless Reports which have been spread, make it necessary for me to assure you, that …"
"It is intolerable that it should be in the power of one blockhead to do so much mischief."
"[H]e thought one of the most splendid triumphs of Christianity was, its having caused slavery to be so generally abol…"