Some Account of George William Wilshere : Baron Bramwell of Hever, And His Opinions

Cover Some Account of George William Wilshere : Baron Bramwell of Hever, And His Opinions
Some Account of George William Wilshere : Baron Bramwell of Hever, And His Opinions
Charles Fairfield
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. . It seems almost funny that this moribund Parliament should desire to make the Irish Church a donatio causa mortis ; it is odd there is so little stir. But I think it not at all unlikely 170 A MEMOIR OF LORD BRAMWELL ing such a bitter alternative as the ascendancy of Disraeli. When Niagara was actually shot in 1868, the falls turned out to be about eight inches high. Lord Bramwell then began to think that the mischief impending was not political at all, mainly economic. Meanwhile, up to a ce...rtain point Mr. Gladstone s ingrained economic ideas, thanks to Whig carpentry^ dovetailed in very well with the ideas of the new era.
Putting alarmist rhetoric and exaggeration on one side, was there, it may be asked, any good grounds for that anxiety which Opportunist Liberals felt — which Lord Bramwell expressed without waste of words— during *the transition period' between 1880 and 1893, when the electors enfranchised in 1868 and 1884 were feeling their political feet — learning, as other * ruling classes' in this country have had to learn, the responsibilities of power?


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