How To Use Disraeli In A Sentence

  • Time is precious, but truth is more precious than time. Benjamin Disraeli 
  • The secret of success in life is for a man to be ready for his opportunity when it comes. Benjamin Disraeli 
  • Benjamin Disraeli blamed the Act of 1774 for ‘all those flat, dull spiritless streets, all resembling each other, like a large family of plain children.’
  • There was a car reported stolen from Disraeli Street between nine-thirty and eleven o ' clock on the night Leanne Wray disappeared. AFTERMATH
  • Himself a staunch follower of Mr. Disraeli, and an abhorrer of Whiggery in all its forms, he yet found in America's struggle that which appealed both to his brain and his heart. The Path of the King
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  • Youth is the trustee of prosperity. Benjamin Disraeli 
  • There was a car reported stolen from Disraeli Street between nine-thirty and eleven o ' clock on the night Leanne Wray disappeared. AFTERMATH
  • It would be of interest to divagate from literature to politics and inquire to what extent Romanticism is incorporate in Imperialism; to inquire to what extent Romanticism has possessed the imagination of Imperialists, and to what extent it was made use of by Disraeli. Imperfect Critics
  • His recent utterances have shown him to have a more than ethnic affinity with Disraeli; and these are times that demand the Disraelian touch.
  • Never apologize for showing feeling. When you do so, you apologize for the truth. Benjamin Disraeli 
  • Disraeli had resisted the attempts of some of his party faithful to make the Tories a solely Anglican party.
  • There are three types of lies - lies, damn lies, and statistics. Benjamin Disraeli 
  • Sweet is the voice of a sister in the season of sorrow. Benjamin Disraeli 
  • On March 20, 1878 Hannah married Philip Archibald Primrose, fifth Earl of Rosebery (1847 – 1929), to whom she had apparently been introduced when she was seventeen years old by Mrs. Disraeli at Newmarket. Rothschild, Hannah de, Countess of Rosebery.
  • Similarly, when preparing the edition of 1846, while Disraeli cut the polemics from the Preface, he still left intact most of the notes, and even permitted Alroy to be reissued at the same time that he published the political Introduction - Critical Apparatus
  • I say that justice is truth in action. Benjamin Disraeli 
  • Hope unfulfilled is at the heart of Disraeli's Judaism, as it was also of his personal affairs when, as a young man at a loose end, he produced Alroy. Vincent - Criticism - Critical Contexts
  • That depends, Sir,' said Disraeli, 'whether I embrace your policies or your mistress.'. Benjamin Disraeli 
  • However gradual may be the growth of confidence, that of credit requires still more time to arrive at maturity. Benjamin Disraeli 
  • However gradual may be the growth of confidence, that of credit requires still more time to arrive at maturity. Benjamin Disraeli 
  • And it was Disraeli who grasped that 'jingoism' - a potent cocktail of popular patriotism and imperial expansionism - could win new voters among newly enfranchised groups such as artisans, skilled workers and shopkeepers: the Essex Men of the Victorian era. Home | Mail Online
  • Like Disraeli on becoming prime minister, Chapman could say he had climbed to the top of the greasy pole.
  • In 1947 Britain lost control of India, the colony that British prime minister Disraeli had once called the ‘jewel in the crown of England’.
  • There are three types of lies - lies, damn lies, and statistics. Benjamin Disraeli 
  • I have seen it attributed variously to Mark Twain and Benjamin Disraeli.
  • In my own defence I can only say that if, as Disraeli said, the best way to learn history is by reading biographies then the best obituaries are magnificent potted histories - a fabulous chronicle of the century just closed.
  • He broke down in his maiden speech; but recovered himself in a later effort, and spoke, not unfrequently, on subjects then important, now forgotten; on the outrage of the "Charles et George"; the capture of the Sardinian "Cagliari" by the Neapolitans on the high seas; our attitude towards the Paris Congress of 1857; while in 1858 he led the revolt against Lord Palmerston's proposal to amend the Conspiracy Laws in deference to Louis Napoleon; in 1860 vigorously denounced the annexation of Savoy and Nice; and in 1864 moved the amendment to Mr. Disraeli's motion in the debate on the Address, which was carried by 313 to 295. Biographical Study of A W Kinglake
  • The secret of success in life is for a man to be ready for his opportunity when it comes. Benjamin Disraeli 
  • I feel a very unusual sensation - if it is not indigestion, it must be gratitude. Benjamin Disraeli 
  • But the baptismal water proved unequal to the task of washing away Benjamin Disraeli's innate orientalism of deportment.
  • There was a car reported stolen from Disraeli Street between nine-thirty and eleven o ' clock on the night Leanne Wray disappeared. AFTERMATH
  • A canter is a cure for every evil. Benjamin Disraeli 
  • On entering public life, disraeli aspired to be both scholar and orator.
  • Industrial and human wastes fouled drinking water, turning the Thames into an open sewer whose stench drove Disraeli choking from the chamber of the Commons in the ‘great stink’ of 1858.
  • Of those numbers we are obliged to say they confirm the truth in the Disraeli aphorism, ‘There are three kinds of lies: lies, damned lies and statistics.’
  • The disappointment of manhood succeeds the delusion of youth. Benjamin Disraeli 
  • I feel a very unusual sensation - if it is not indigestion, it must be gratitude. Benjamin Disraeli 
  • Lord Hardwicke, as might have been expected, was among those 'men of metal and large acred squires,' as Disraeli called them, 'the flower of that great party which had been so proud to follow one who had been so proud to lead them, whose loyalty was too severely tried by the conversion of their chief to the doctrines of Manchester,' and early in February he wrote to Charles Philip Yorke, Fourth Earl of Hardwicke, Vice-Admiral R.N. — a Memoir
  • And a figure like Joseph Chamberlain had sublime confidence, as had Disraeli before him, that the people could be ‘managed’.
  • This dramatic use of intertext suggests that Disraeli, in searching for a narrative within whose terms Jewish suffering can be refigured as heroic, finds only the Christian Passion. Valman - Criticism - Critical Contexts
  • Disraeli saw its dangers and wished to take steps to quickly defuse the gathering tensions.
  • Among those who remained faithful were Lord LAMBOURNE (in the Peers 'Gallery), who had for this occasion substituted a posy of primroses for his usual picotee, and, quaintly enough, Mr. HOGGE, who had not hitherto been suspected of Disraelian sympathies. Punch, or the London Charivari, Vol. 158, 1920-04-25
  • That role was played by huge and gentle Disraeli, Amy's golden retriever, who galumphed with her up the elevator to the African Arts office every day, where he laid in wait for Povey to bring him biscuits.
  • Disraeli seized the chance to buy a controlling interest in the Suez canal, he sent the flamboyant Lytton to India as viceroy, and his 1876 Royal Titles Act proclaimed Victoria empress of India.
  • That depends, Sir,' said Disraeli, 'whether I embrace your policies or your mistress.'. Benjamin Disraeli 
  • The secret of success in life is for a man to be ready for his opportunity when it comes. Benjamin Disraeli 
  • How much easier it is to be critical than to be correct. Benjamin Disraeli 
  • His Christianity was muscular. Benjamin Disraeli 
  • The secret of success in life is for a man to be ready for his opportunity when it comes. Benjamin Disraeli 
  • It completely lacks the social dimension that Pugin and Disraeli both intended.
  • Against this, Disraeli wanted to make the Tories into a ‘national party’, representing all classes rather than just the bloated squirearchy.
  • As Disraeli said: ‘When a man fell into his anecdotage it was a sign for him to retire from the world.’
  • Little things affect little minds. Benjamin Disraeli 
  • Conservatism revived with the dual leadership of Bentinck and Disraeli.
  • Disraeli had resisted the attempts of some of his party faithful to make the Tories a solely Anglican party.
  • Courage is fire, and bullying is smoke. Benjamin Disraeli 
  • Disraeli, not yet fully recognised as leader of the protectionists, was working hard for that position, and assumed the manners of it, with Beresford, a kind of whipper-in, for his right-hand man. The Life of William Ewart Gladstone, Vol. 1 (of 3) 1809-1859
  • The Youth of a Nation are the trustees of posterity. Benjamin Disraeli 
  • Disraeli's purchase of the shares of the Khedive of Egypt in the Suez Canal Company was a further blow to the French, who had not forgotten that Great Britain had displaced French power in Canada and India in the eighteenth century.
  • Yet it was inevitable that the plan and policy of Sir John Macdonald should differ materially from the plan and policy of Mr. Disraeli. Imperial Trade and Imperial Defence
  • There was a car reported stolen from Disraeli Street between nine-thirty and eleven o ' clock on the night Leanne Wray disappeared. AFTERMATH
  • The secret of success in life is for a man to be ready for his opportunity when it comes. Benjamin Disraeli 
  • Born to Italian-Jewish parents, in 1817 Disraeli's father baptised his children as Christians.
  • By his late twenties, Disraeli's sartorial and social extravagance had left him deep in debt.
  • An interesting book, Sybil, but Disraeli was not much of a novelist; it reads like spirited and somewhat artless version of Brontë's Shirley, or an abridged and more explicitly class-based Wives and Daughters.
  • The secret to success is constancy of purpose. Benjamin Disraeli 
  • Yet their attitude to the poor, if condescending, was generous, and echoes of Young England survived as elements in Disraeli's later vision of Tory democracy.
  • In 1875 Disraeli bought the Khedive's large holding in the shares of the company which ran the canal.
  • Christianity is completed Judaism, or it is nothing. Benjamin Disraeli 
  • How much easier it is to be critical than to be correct. Benjamin Disraeli 
  • In Alroy’s hyperbolic self-dramatisation is the thinly disguised voice of the young frustrated Disraeli who has not yet begun to fulfil the ‘ideal ambition’ of which he wrote in his diary. Schwarz 1 - Criticism - Critical Contexts

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