[Queen Victoria by Lytton Strachey]@TWC D-Link book
Queen Victoria

CHAPTER V
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But there is a point beyond which boldness becomes rashness--a point perceptible only to intuition and not to reason; and beyond that point Palmerston never went.

When he saw that the cast demanded it, he could go slow--very slow indeed in fact, his whole career, so full of vigorous adventure, was nevertheless a masterly example of the proverb, "tout vient a point a qui sait attendre." But when he decided to go quick, nobody went quicker.

One day, returning from Osborne, he found that he had missed the train to London; he ordered a special, but the station master told him that to put a special train upon the line at that time of day would be dangerous and he could not allow it.

Palmerston insisted declaring that he had important business in London, which could not wait.

The station-master supported by all the officials, continued to demur the company, he said, could not possibly take the responsibility.


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