Benjamin Disraeli quotes - page 14
Benjamin Disraeli was a British statesman and novelist who twice served as Prime Minister of the United Kingdom. His leadership played a crucial role in shaping the modern Conservative Party and expanding the British Empire. He is remembered for his wit, reforms, and rivalry with William Gladstone. Here are 419 of his quotes:
The English people are, without exception, the most enthusiastic people in the world. There are more excitable races. The French, the Italians, are much more excitable; but for deep and fervid feeling, there is no race in the world at all equal to the English. And what is the subject, of all others, upon which the English people have been most enthusiastic? Religion. The notes on the gamut of their feeling are few, but they are deep. Industry, Liberty, Religion, form the solemn scale. Industry, Liberty, Religion - that is the history of England.
Benjamin Disraeli
I confess I am inclined to believe that an English gentleman-born to business, managing his own estate, administering the affairs of his county, mixing with all classes of his fellowmen, now in the hunting field, now in the railway direction, unaffected, un-ostentatious, proud of his ancestors, if they have contributed to the greatness of our common country-is, on the whole, more likely to form a senator agreeable to the English opinion and English taste than any substitute that has yet been produced.
Benjamin Disraeli
Benjamin Disraeli
Occupation: British Statesman
Born: December 21, 1804
Died: April 19, 1881
Quotes count: 419
Wikipedia: Benjamin Disraeli
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