The drink evil is a leper spot
on the surface of the nation, a moral canker eating
into the vitality of our people, and producing effects which do not die within
the year, or the life, or even the generation, but which will be reproduced
from year to year, from generation to generation in a terrible portentous
legacy of poverty, misery and crime.
-
Lord
Curzon[1]
[1] George
Nathaniel Curzon, the eldest son of Baron Curzon, was born in 1859. A brilliant
student, at Eton College he won a record number of academic prizes before
entering Oxford University in 1878. He was elected president of the Oxford
Union in 1880 and although he failed to achieve a first he was made a fellow of
All Souls College in 1883. A member of the Conservative
Party, Curzon was elected MP for Southport in 1886. It was a safe
Tory seat and he neglected his parliamentary duties to travel the world. This
provided the material for his Russia in
Central Asia (1889), Persia and the
Persian Question (1892) and Problems
of the Far East (1894).
In 1891 the Marquis of Salisbury appointed Curzon as his secretary of state for India. Curzon lost office when Earl of Rosebery formed a Liberal Government in 1894. After the 1895 General Election, the Conservative Party regained power and Curzon was rewarded with the post of undersecretary for foreign affairs. Three years later the Marquis of Salisbury granted him the title Baron Curzon of Kedleston, and appointed him Viceroy of India.
Curzon introduced a series of reforms that upset his civil servants. He also clashed with Lord Kitchener, who became commander-in-chief of the Indian Army, in 1902. Arthur Balfour, the new leader of the Conservative Party, began to have doubts about Curzon; in 1905 Curzon was forced out of office. He returned to England where he led the campaign against women’s suffrage in the House of Lords. In 1908 he helped establish the Anti-Suffrage League and eventually became its president.
In 1916 the new Prime Minister, David Lloyd George, invited Curzon into his War Cabinet. Curzon served as leader of the House of Lords but refused to support the government’s decision to introduce the 1918 Qualification of Women Act. Despite Curzon’s objections, it was passed by the Lords by 134 votes to 71. Curzon was appointed foreign secretary in 1919 and when Andrew Bonar Law resigned as prime minister in 1923, Curzon was expected to become the new prime minister. However, the post went to Stanley Baldwin instead. Curzon continued as foreign secretary until retiring from politics in 1924; he died in 1925. (Source: Wikipedia)
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