[The Mirrors of Downing Street by Harold Begbie]@TWC D-Link book
The Mirrors of Downing Street

CHAPTER VIII
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CHAPTER VIII.
LORD ROBERT CECIL _"Nothing great was ever achieved without enthusiasm."_--EMERSON.
If a novelist take for his hero an educated gentleman who expresses contempt for the licence and indecencies of modern life, it is ten to one that the critics, who confess themselves on other occasions as sick of prurient tales, will pronounce this hero to be a prig.

In like manner, let a politician evince concern for the moral character of the nation and it is ten to one his colleagues in the House of Commons and his critics in the Press, and everywhere the very men most in despair of politics, will declare him to be a fanatic.
This has been the unfortunate fate of Lord Robert Cecil.

He is regarded by his countrymen as unpractical.

Men speak well of him, and confess willingly that he is vastly superior in character and intellect to the ruck of politicians, but nevertheless wind up their panegyrics with the regretful judgment that, alas, he is a fanatic.
It is a thousand pities, I think, that he is not a fanatic.

It is for the very reason he is not fanatical that his progress in politics has been in the suburbs of the second rank.


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