The Life of William Ewart Gladstone, Vol. 2 (of 3) by John Morley

(11 User reviews)   4603
By Jacob Brown Posted on Dec 22, 2025
In Category - Hard Sci-Fi
Morley, John, 1838-1923 Morley, John, 1838-1923
English
Hey, if you think modern politics is dramatic, wait until you meet William Gladstone. This second volume of his biography covers the wild years 1859-1880, when he truly became 'The People's William.' It's all here: his explosive fights with Benjamin Disraeli (their rivalry is legendary), his shocking shift from Conservative to Liberal firebrand, and his first huge term as Prime Minister. The book shows how he championed ordinary people against the establishment, pushing Irish reform and expanding voting rights, while wrestling with his own deep religious faith. It's not just dates and laws—it's the story of how one stubborn, brilliant man tried to reshape Britain, and made plenty of enemies along the way.
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ampler background of this striking epoch in Mr. Gladstone’s public life. The old principles of the European state-system, and the old principles that inspired the vast contentions of ages, lingered but they seemed to have grown decrepit. Divine right of kings, providential pre-eminence of dynasties, balance of power, sovereign independence of the papacy,—these and the other accredited catchwords of history were giving place to the vague, indefinable, shifting, but most potent and inspiring doctrine of Nationality. On no statesman of this time did that fiery doctrine with all its tributaries gain more commanding hold than on Mr. Gladstone. “Of the various and important incidents,” he writes in a memorandum, dated Braemar, July 16, 1892, “which associated me almost unawares with foreign affairs in Greece (1850), in the Neapolitan kingdom (1851), and in the Balkan peninsula and the Turkish empire (1853), I will only say that they all contributed to forward the action of those home causes more continuous in their operation, which, without in any way effacing my old sense of reverence for the past, determined for me my place in the present and my direction towards the future.” I (M1) At the opening of the seventh decade of the century—ten years of such moment for our western world—the relations of the European states with one another had fallen into chaos. The perilous distractions of 1859-62 were the prelude to conflicts that after strange and mighty events at Sadowa, Venice, Rome, Sedan, Versailles, came to their close in 1871. The first breach in the ramparts of European order set up by the kings after Waterloo, was the independence of Greece in 1829. Then followed the transformation of the power of the Turk over Roumanians and Serbs from despotism to suzerainty. In 1830 Paris overthrew monarchy by divine right; Belgium cut herself asunder from the supremacy of the Dutch; then Italians and Poles strove hard but in vain to shake off the yoke of Austria and of Russia. In 1848 revolts of race against alien dominion broke out afresh in Italy and Hungary. The rise of the French empire, bringing with it the principle or idiosyncrasy of its new ruler, carried this movement of race into its full ascendant. Treaties were confronted by the doctrine of Nationality. What called itself Order quaked before something that for lack of a better name was called the Revolution. Reason of State was eclipsed by the Rights of Peoples. Such was the spirit of the new time. The end of the Crimean war and the peace of Paris brought a temporary and superficial repose. The French ruler, by strange irony at once the sabre of Revolution and the trumpet of Order, made a beginning in urging the constitution of a Roumanian nationality, by uniting the two Danubian principalities in a single quasi-independent state. This was obviously a further step towards that partition of Turkey which the Crimean war had been waged to prevent. Austria for reasons of her own objected, and England, still in her Turcophil humour, went with Austria against France for keeping the two provinces, although in fiscal and military union, politically divided. According to the fashion of that time—called a comedy by some, a homage to the democratic evangel by others—a popular vote was taken. Its result was ingeniously falsified by the sultan (whose ability to speak French was one of the odd reasons why Lord Palmerston was sanguine about Turkish civilisation); western diplomacy insisted that the question of union should be put afresh. Mr. Gladstone, not then in office, wrote to Lord Aberdeen (Sept. 10, 1857):— The course taken about the...

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This book picks up Gladstone's story in 1859, as he re-enters government. Forget a quiet political comeback—this is where things get really interesting. We follow him through his fierce parliamentary battles, especially with his arch-rival, the witty and cunning Benjamin Disraeli. The core of the story is Gladstone's dramatic transformation. He starts as a Peelite Conservative but ends up as the towering leader of the Liberal Party, winning a massive election in 1868 to become Prime Minister for the first time.

Why You Should Read It

Morley gets you inside Gladstone's head. You see his incredible drive and his stubbornness. The best parts are the personal clashes. His feud with Disraeli isn't just policy—it's a clash of personalities, style, and vision. You also see Gladstone's private side: his deep religious beliefs, his habit of chopping down trees for stress relief, and his complicated family life. It makes this historical giant feel human. The book shows how principle and ambition constantly wrestled inside him.

Final Verdict

Perfect for anyone who loves a great political story, even if you're not a history expert. If you enjoy shows about power, strategy, and complex characters, you'll find Gladstone fascinating. This volume is especially good because it covers his peak years—the victories, the reforms, and the personal costs. It's a gripping portrait of a man who helped define modern Britain.



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Paul Taylor
2 years ago

Thanks for the recommendation.

4.5
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