Benjamin Disraeli — "I believe that nothing in newspapers is ever true. And that is why they are so p…"
I believe that nothing in newspapers is ever true. And that is why they are so popular; the taste of the age being so decidedly for fiction.
I believe that nothing in newspapers is ever true. And that is why they are so popular; the taste of the age being so decidedly for fiction.
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"With words we govern men."
"I am a gentleman. I live in a world of gentlemen."
"The most important thing in life is to know how to live."
"Most people die with their music still locked up inside them."
"The greatest of all evils is a weak government."
British Prime Minister who built modern Conservative populism; the only PM of Jewish heritage and a celebrated novelist before politics. Closely associated with Lord Salisbury (his Conservative successor as PM). For an intellectual contrast, see William Ewart Gladstone, four-time Liberal Prime Minister — the two alternated as PM four times — Gladstone's free-trade moralism and Disraeli's imperialist pragmatism are the founding poles of British party politics.
From his novel 'Lothair', spoken by characters Madame Phoebus and Euphrosyne.
Date: 1870
InspirationalFound in 1 providers: gemini
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