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William Ewart Gladstone

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He was the first Chancellor of the Exchequer who ever made the Budget interesting. "He talked shop," it was said, "like a tenth muse." He could apply all the resources of a glowing rhetoric to the most prosaic questions of cost and profit; could make beer romantic and sugar serious. He could sweep the widest horizon of the financial future, and yet stoop to bestow the minutest attention on the microcosm of penny stamps and the monetary merits of half-farthings.
--
G.W.E. Russell, Collections and Recollections (1898): Ch. 12, "Parliamentary Oratory (continued)".

 
William Ewart Gladstone

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