Books by "Sir Cyril Asquith"

6 books found

The Prime Minister and His Mistress

The Prime Minister and His Mistress

by Sir Oliver Popplewell

2014 · Lulu.com

Herbert Henry Asquith had a heart that burned for politics - and women. At sixty-years old in 1912, he had five children by his first wife and two by his second wife. He was also the prime minister of Great Britain at a critical time - just two years before the outbreak of World War One. Venetia Stanley was only twenty-two-years old and the best friend of Asquith's daughter, Violet, who later became Lady Violet Bonham Carter. Between 1912 and 1915, Asquith wrote more than five hundred passionate love letters to Venetia. Asquith wrote to her while conducting Cabinet meetings and during debates in the House of Commons. Once war began, he told her government secrets, and he reportedly valued her advice above all others. Historians have long been haunted by whether or not the relationship ever turned into a physical affair. Like a good detective story, you'll be led to your own conclusion in The Prime Minister and His Mistress.

Principles of the Law of Contracts

Principles of the Law of Contracts

by Sir John William Salmond, Sir Percy Henry Winfield

1927

The Law of Torts

The Law of Torts

by Sir John William Salmond

1928

Great Contemporaries [Revised Edition]

Great Contemporaries [Revised Edition]

by Sir Winston Churchill

2017 · Arcole Publishing

This is a collection of 25 short biographical essays about famous people, written and published by Winston Churchill before his first tenure as Britain's Prime Minister from 1940-1945. The original collection of 21 essays was published in 1937, mainly written between 1928 and 1931. This 1939 edition contains four additional essays on Lord Fisher, Charles Stewart Parnell, Lord Baden-Powell and Franklin D. Roosevelt. "THESE essays on Great Men of our age have been written by me at intervals during the last eight years. Although each is self-contained, they throw from various angles, a light upon the main course of the events through which we have lived. I hope they will be found to illustrate some of its less well-known aspects. Taken together they should present not only the actors but the scene. In their sequence they may perhaps be the stepping-stones of historical narrative. The central theme is of course the group of British statesmen who shone at the end of the last century and the beginning of this—Balfour, Chamberlain, Rosebery, Morley, Asquith and Curzon. All lived, worked and disputed for so many years together, knew each other well, and esteemed each other highly. It was my privilege as a far younger man to be admitted to their society and their kindness. Reading again these chapters has brought them back to me, and made me feel how much has changed in our political life. Perhaps this is but the illusion which comes upon us all as we grow older. Certainly we must all hope this may prove to be so. In the meantime those to whom these great men are but names—that is to say the vast majority of my readers—may perhaps be glad to gain from these notes some acquaintance with them." "By far the most important, thoughtful edition of Churchill's famous personality sketches ever published...The indispensable 'desert island' text for any marooned Churchillian."—Finest Hour "Interesting, well written and worth reading."—Kirkus Reviews

Jurisprudence

Jurisprudence

by Sir John William Salmond

1930