1982
DOI: 10.1017/s0021121400017569
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La trahison des clercs:British intellectuals and the first home–rule crisis

Abstract: In the early months of 1882 two of the writers who were to be prominent four years later in opposing Gladstone’s first Irish home-rule bill made similar complaints to correspondents about the state of British public opinion. ‘Less is thought of the Irish question than of the Australian cricketers’, wrote Goldwin Smith; while in characteristic vein, James Fitzjames Stephen waxed choleric about the ‘extravagant idiocy’ of a public obsessed with ‘Jumbo the elephant’, while ignoring ‘one of the most disgusting and… Show more

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Cited by 8 publications
(1 citation statement)
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“…Nevertheless, there were tactical reasons to expand the 1886 clause. In Britain, most intellectuals were already opposed to home rule, 89 as were many prominent newspapers and periodicals. 90 As Gladstone could not afford another round of defections, he may have thought the clause would persuade any wavering supporters that home rule would not threaten minorities.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Nevertheless, there were tactical reasons to expand the 1886 clause. In Britain, most intellectuals were already opposed to home rule, 89 as were many prominent newspapers and periodicals. 90 As Gladstone could not afford another round of defections, he may have thought the clause would persuade any wavering supporters that home rule would not threaten minorities.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%