Read The Churchill Factor: How One Man Made History Online
Authors: Boris Johnson
‘the Palestinians never miss
. . . opportunity’
Oded Balaban,
Interpreting Conflict: Israeli–Palestinian Negotiations at Camp David II and Beyond
(New York: 2005), p. 60.
‘If one promise
. . . fulfil both’
Winston Churchill’s reply to Mousa Kasem El-Hussaini; Howard Grief,
The Legal Foundation and Borders of Israel Under International Law: A Treatise on Jewish Sovereignty Over the Land of Israel
( Jerusalem, 2008), p. 446.
‘It was a declaration
. . . intimately associated’
Winston Churchill’s reply to Mousa Kasem El-Hussaini, in Gilbert,
Winston S. Churchill, vol. 4; The Stricken World,
p. 565.
‘Our Jewish and Zionist
. . . rights’
Gilbert,
Winston S. Churchill, Vol. 4; The Stricken World,
p. 567.
‘prudence
. . . patience’
Norman Rose, ‘Churchill and Zionism’, in Robert Blake and William Roger Louis, eds.,
Churchill: A Major New Reassessment of His Life in Peace and War
(London: 1996), p. 156.
‘Every step
. . . all Palestinians’
Gilbert,
Churchill: A Life
, p. 435.
‘Some people
. . . appeared in the world’
Michael Makovsky,
Churchill’s Promised Land: Zionism and Statecraft
(New Haven, Conn.: 2007), p. 85.
‘Hebrew bloodsuckers’
Cohen,
Churchill and the Jews
, p. 138.
‘tendency to orientalism’
Lady Gwendoline Bertie to Churchill, 27 August 1907; Randolph Churchill and Martin Gilbert,
Winston S. Churchill, vol. 2, Companion Part 1
, p. 672. See also Warren Dockter, ‘The Influence of a Poet: Wilfrid S. Blunt and the Churchills’,
Journal of Historical Biography,
vol. 10 (Autumn 2011), pp. 70–102.
in his new survey
Warren Dockter,
Winston Churchill and the Islamic World: Orientalism, Empire and Diplomacy in the Middle East
(London: 2014).
‘sacred and beloved homeland
. . . trade’
Isaiah Freidman,
Palestine, a Twice-Promised Land: The British, the Arabs & Zionism : 1915-1920
(London: 2000), p. 171.
‘We committed ourselves
. . . inhabitants of the country’
Paul Addison,
Churchill: The Unexpected Hero
, p. 101.
‘I do not admit
. . . power to be the judge’
Palestine Royal Commission, Minutes of Evidence, 12 March 1937; CHAR/2/317/8666, 8728, pp. 503, 507.
‘a score of mud villages
. . . usually starving’
Cohen,
Churchill and the Jews
, p. 67.
‘I can’t understand
. . . make them sneeze’
Winston Churchill in War Office minutes, 22 May 1919, Gilbert,
Winston S. Churchill,
vol. 4, Companion Part 1,
p. 649.
‘I hate Irak
. . . ungrateful volcano’
Ronald Hyam, ‘Churchill and the British Empire’ in Blake and Louis,
Churchill
, p. 174.
‘an odious act of ingratitude’
Martin Gilbert,
Winston S. Churchill, vol. 8: ‘Never Despair’ 1945–1965
(London: 1988), p. 1233.
‘I have achieved
. . . nothing in the end’
Rose,
Unruly Life,
p. 424.
As Richard Toye has pointed out
Richard Toye,
Churchill’s Empire: The World That Made Him and the World That He Made
(London: 2011), p. 316.
22.
T
HE
M
EANING OF
H
IS
N
AME
T
ODAY
‘My darling one
. . . Your ever & always W’
Martin Gilbert,
Winston S. Churchill, vol. 8: ‘Never Despair’ 1945–1965
(London: 1988), p. 1342.
‘My life is over
. . . not yet ended’
Martin Gilbert,
Churchill: A Life
(New York: 1991), p. 956.
‘there should be no barrier
. . . fitted for it’
Richard Toye,
Churchill’s Empire: The World That Made Him and the World That He Made
(London: 2011), p. xii.
‘What are you going to do
. . . almost extinct’
Richard Langworth,
Churchill: By Himself
(New York: 2013), p. 569.
‘the unnatural
. . . impossible to exaggerate’
See Gilbert, ‘Churchill and Eugenics’ http://www.winstonchurchill.org/support/the-churchill-centre/publications/finest-hour-online/594-churchill-and-eugenics. Accessed 4 September 2014.
‘Three generations
. . . is enough’
Martin Gilbert, ibid.
‘I feel you have come
. . . defend myself’
Langworth,
Churchill’s Wit: The Definitive Collection
(New York: 2009), p. 101.
‘When I think
. . . treated equally’
Richard Langworth,
Churchill: By Himself
(New York: 2013), p. 442.
‘Gandhi
. . . elephant’
Arthur Herman,
Gandhi & Churchill: The Epic Rivalry That Destroyed an Empire and Forged Our Age
(London: 2009), p. 273.
‘Some experiments
. . . canvas since’
Winston Churchill,
Thoughts and Adventures
(London: 1949), pp. 234–35.
‘He had sympathy
. . . all over the world’
Gilbert,
Winston S. Churchill, vol. 8
,
‘Never Despair’,
p.1361.
‘character
. . . in an infant’
Gilbert,
Churchill: A Life
, p. 487.
23.
T
HE
C
HURCHILL
F
ACTOR
an essay by the psychologist Anthony Storr
See Anthony Storr, ‘The Man’ in A.J.P. Taylor, ed.,
Churchill: Four Faces and the Man
(London: 1969), pp. 210–11.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
The bibliography has been compiled by Dr Warren Dockter, Research Fellow at the University of Cambridge, to cover not only works quoted or cited in the text, but also material consulted during the preparation of this book.
P
RIMARY
S
OURCES
Unpublished Sources
The National Archives
Cabinet papers (CAB)
Hansard: House of Common Debates
Prime Minister’s papers (PREM)
Personal papers
(Leo) Amery papers, Churchill College, Cambridge (AMEL)
(Julian) Amery papers, Churchill College, Cambridge (AMEJ)
Broadwater Collection, Churchill College, Cambridge (BRDW)
Chartwell Manuscripts, Churchill College, Cambridge (CHWL)
(Clementine) Churchill papers, Churchill College, Cambridge (CSCT)
(Lord Randoph) Churchill papers, Churchill College, Cambridge (RCHL)
(Randolph) Churchill papers, Churchill College, Cambridge (RCDCH)
(Winston) Churchill papers, Churchill College, Cambridge (CHAR & CHUR)
Churchill Additional Collection, Churchill College, Cambridge (WCHL)
(John) Colville papers, Churchill College, Cambridge (CLVL)
Published Sources
Major works by Winston Churchill
Churchill, Winston
, A History of the English-Speaking Peoples
,
Vols I–IV. London: Cassell and Company Ltd., 1956.
———
Amid These Storms: Thoughts and Adventures
. London: Thornton Butterworth, Ltd., 1932.
———
Great Contemporaries
. London: Thornton Butterworth, Ltd., 1932.
———
Ian Hamilton’s March
. London: Longmans, Green, & Co.,
1900.
———
India-Speeches
. London: Thornton Butterworth, Ltd., 1931.
———
London to Ladysmith Via Pretoria
. London: Longmans, Green, & Co.,
1900.
———
Lord Randolph Churchill
,
Vols I–II. London: Macmillan and Co., 1906.
———
Marlborough: His Life and Times
,
Vols I–IV. London: George C. Harrap & Co., 1933–38.
———
My African Journey
. London: Hodder and Stoughton, 1908.
———
My Early Life: A Roving Commission
. London: Thornton Butterworth, Ltd., 1930.
———
Painting as a Pastime
. London: Odhams Press, 1948.
———
Savrola: A Tale of Revolution in Laurania
. London, Longmans, Green, & Co., 1900.
———
The River War
:
An Account of the Reconquest of the Sudan
,
Vols I–II. London:
Longmans, Green, & Co., 1899.
———
World War II
,
Vols I–VI. London: Cassell & Co., 1948–54.
———
The Story of the Malakand Field Force: An Episode of Frontier War
. London: Longmans, Green, & Co., 1898.
———
The World Crisis,
Vols I–V. London: Thornton Butterworth, Ltd.,
1923–31.
The official biography
Churchill, Randolph S.,
Winston S Churchill Vol. I: Youth 1875–1900
. London: Heinemann, 1966.
Churchill, Randolph S. (ed.),
Companion Volume I, Parts 1 and 2.
London: Heinemann, 1967.
———
Winston S Churchill Vol. II: Young Statesmen 1901–1914
. London: Heinemann, 1967.
———
(ed.),
Companion Volume II, Parts 1, 2, and 3.
London: Heinemann
,
1969.