Tuesday, December 3, 2019
Winston Churchill Essays (1787 words) - Winston Churchill
  Winston Churchill    Winston Churchill, born on Nov. 30, 1874, at Blenheim Palace, the famous palace  near Oxford built by the nation for John Churchill, 1st duke of Marlborough, the  great soldier. Blenheim, named after Marlborough's grandest victory (1704),  meant much to Winston Churchill. In the grounds there he became engaged to his  future wife, Clementine Ogilvy Hozier (b. 1885). He later wrote his historical  masterpiece, The Life and Times of John Churchill, Duke of Marlborough, with the  archives of Blenheim behind him. English on his father's side, American on his  mother's, Sir Winston Leonard Spencer Churchill embodied and expressed the  double vitality and the national qualities of both peoples. His names testify to  the richness of his historic inheritance: Winston, after the Royalist family  with whom the Churchills married before the English Civil War; Leonard, after  his remarkable grandfather, Leonard Jerome of New York; Spencer, the married  name of a daughter of the 1st duke of Marlborough, from whom the family  descended; Churchill, the family name of the 1st duke, which his descendents  resumed after the Battle of Waterloo. All these strands come together in a  career that had no parallel in British history for richness, range, length, and  achievement. Churchill took a leading part in laying the foundations of the  welfare state in Britain, in preparing the Royal Navy for World War I, and in  settling the political boundaries in the Middle East after the war. In WORLD WAR  II emerged as the leader of the united British nation and Commonwealth to resist  the German domination of Europe, as an inspirer of the resistance among free  peoples, and as a prime architect of victory. In this, and in the struggle  against communism afterward, he made himself an indispensable link between the  British and American peoples, for he foresaw that the best defense for the free  world was the coming together of the English-speaking peoples. Profoundly  historically minded, he also had prophetic foresight: British-American unity was  the message of his last great book, A History of the English-Speaking Peoples.  He was a combination of soldier, writer, artist, and statesman. He was not so  good as a mere party politician. Like Julius Caesar, he stands out not only as a  great man of action, but as a writer of it too. He had genius; as a man he was  charming, gay, ebullient, endearing. As for personal defects, such a man was  bound to be a great egoist; if that is a defect. So strong a personality was apt  to be overbearing. He was something of a gambler, always too willing to take  risks. In his earlier career, people thought him of unbalanced judgment partly  from the very excess of his energies and gifts. That is the worst that can be  said of him. With no other great man is the familiar legend more true to the  facts. We know all there is to know about him; there was no disguise. His  father, Lord Randolph Churchill, was a younger son of the 7th duke of  Marlborough. His mother was Jennie Jerome; and as her mother, Clara Hall, was  one-quarter Iroquois, Sir Winston had an Indian strain in him. Lord Randolph, a  brilliant Conservative leader who had been chancellor of the exchequer in his  30's, died when only 46, after ruining his career. His son wrote that one could  not grow up in that household without realizing that there had been a disaster  in the background. It was an early spur to him to try to make up for his gifted  father's failure, not only in politics and in writing, but on the turf. Young  Winston, though the grandson of a duke, had to make his own way in the world,  earning his living by his tongue and his pen. In this he had the comradeship of  his mother, who was always courageous and undaunted. Rejoining his regiment, he  was sent to serve in India. Here, besides his addiction to polo, he went on  seriously with his education, which in his case was very much self-education.  His mother sent out to him boxes of books, and Churchill absorbed the whole of  Gibbon and Macaulay, and much of Darwin. The influence of the historians is to  be observed all through his writings and in his way of looking at things. The  influence of Darwin is not less observable in his philosophy of life: that all  life is a struggle, the chances of survival favor the fittest, chance is a great  element in the game, the game is to be played with    
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