Prime Ministers and Some Others eBook

George William Erskine Russell
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 287 pages of information about Prime Ministers and Some Others.

Prime Ministers and Some Others eBook

George William Erskine Russell
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 287 pages of information about Prime Ministers and Some Others.
on the table of a nobleman, yet it disappeared just in time to answer the enquiry of the butler, ‘Snipe or pheasant, my lord?’ He instantly replied, ‘Pheasant,’ thus completing his ninth dish of meat at that meal.”  A few weeks later the Speaker, in conversation with Palmerston, expressed a hope that he was taking care of his health, to which the octogenarian Premier replied:  “Oh yes—­indeed I am.  I very often take a cab at night, and if you have both windows open it is almost as good as walking home.”  “Almost as good!” exclaimed the valetudinarian Speaker.  “A through draught and a north-east wind!  And in a hack cab!  What a combination for health!”

[Footnote *:  Afterwards Lord Ossington.]

Palmerston fought and won his last election in July, 1865, being then in his eighty-first year, and he died on the 15th of October next ensuing.  On the 19th the Queen wrote as follows to the statesman who, as Lord John Russell, had been her Prime Minister twenty years before, and who, as Earl Russell, had been for the last six years Foreign Secretary in Palmerston’s Administration:  “The Queen can turn to no other than Lord Russell, an old and tried friend of hers, to undertake the arduous duties of Prime Minister and to carry on the Government.”

It is sometimes said of my good friend Sir George Trevelyan that his most responsible task in life has been to “live up to the position of being his uncle’s nephew.”  He has made a much better job of his task than I have made of mine; and yet I have never been indifferent to the fact that I was related by so close a tie to the author of the first Reform Bill, and the chief promoter—­as regards this country—­of Italian unity and freedom.

II

LORD RUSSELL

Lord John Russell was born in 1792, and became Prime Minister for the first time in 1846.  Soon after, Queen Victoria, naturally interested in the oncoming generation of statesmen, said to the Premier, “Pray tell me, Lord John, whom do you consider the most promising young man in your party?” After due consideration Lord John replied, “George Byng, ma’am,” signifying thereby a youth who eventually became the third Earl of Strafford.

In 1865 Lord John, who in the meantime had been created Earl Russell, became, after many vicissitudes in office and opposition, Prime Minister for the second time.  The Queen, apparently hard put to it for conversation, asked him whom he now considered the most promising young man in the Liberal party.  He replied, without hesitation, “George Byng, ma’am,” thereby eliciting the very natural rejoinder, “But that’s what you told me twenty years ago!”

This fragment of anecdotage, whether true or false, is eminently characteristic of Lord Russell.  In principles, beliefs, opinions, even in tastes and habits, he was singularly unchanging.  He lived to be close on eighty-six; he spent more than half a century in active politics; and it would be difficult to detect in all those years a single deviation from the creed which he professed when, being not yet twenty-one, he was returned as M.P. for his father’s pocket-borough of Tavistock.

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Prime Ministers and Some Others from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.