Selected Speeches on British Foreign Policy 1738-1914 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 549 pages of information about Selected Speeches on British Foreign Policy 1738-1914.

Selected Speeches on British Foreign Policy 1738-1914 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 549 pages of information about Selected Speeches on British Foreign Policy 1738-1914.
to avoid involving ourselves or the country in any responsibility for the results of following that advice in a matter where no English interest is concerned.  I do not think we ought to put ourselves in such a position that any Power could say to us, ’We have acted upon your advice, and we have suffered for it.  You have brought us into this difficulty, and therefore you are bound to get us out of it.’  We ought not, I say, to place ourselves in a position of that kind.  And now, Sir, I have stated all, I think, that it is possible for me to state at this time, and it remains for me only to assure the House—­knowing, as I do, how utterly impossible it is for any member of the Executive to carry on his work effectively without the support of public opinion—­it only remains for me to say that, as far as the nature of the case allows, I shall always be anxious that the House shall be conversant with everything that is done.

JOHN BRIGHT October 29, 1858 PRINCIPLES OF FOREIGN POLICY

The frequent and far too complimentary manner in which my name has been mentioned to-night, and the most kind way in which you have received me, have placed me in a position somewhat humiliating, and really painful; for to receive laudation which one feels one cannot possibly have merited, is much more painful than to be passed by in a distribution of commendation to which possibly one might lay some claim.  If one twentieth part of what has been said is true, if I am entitled to any measure of your approbation, I may begin to think that my public career and my opinions are not so un-English and so anti-national as some of those who profess to be the best of our public instructors have sometimes assumed.  How, indeed, can I, any more than any of you, be un-English and anti-national?  Was I not born upon the same soil?  Do I not come of the same English stock?  Are not my family committed irrevocably to the fortunes of this country?  Is not whatever property I may have depending as much as yours is depending upon the good government of our common fatherland?  Then how shall any man dare to say to any one of his countrymen, because he happen to hold a different opinion on questions of great public policy, that therefore he is un-English, and is to be condemned as anti-national?  There are those who would assume that between my countrymen and me, and between my constituents and me, there has been, and there is now, a great gulf fixed, and that if I cannot pass over to them and to you, they and you can by no possibility pass over to me.

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Selected Speeches on British Foreign Policy 1738-1914 from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.