| Illustrations | xvii |
| Acknowledgments | xix |
| Editor's Preface | xxi |
1. | Young Statesman 1897-1915 | |
| First political speech: 'The dried up drain-pipe of Radicalism', 26 July 1897, Bath | 3 |
| 'Escape!', 23 December 1899, Durban, South Africa | 5 |
| 'The anniversary of my escape', 13 December 1900, New York | 7 |
| Maiden speech: 'A certain splendid memory', 18 February 1901, House of Commons | 8 |
| Lifting again the 'tattered flag', 13 May 1901, House of Commons | 10 |
| 'An age of great events and little men', 21 November 1901, Liverpool | 12 |
| 'A navy ... to preserve the peace of the world', 17 January 1903, Oldham | 13 |
| 'The mere washpot of plutocracy', 4 June 1904, Alexandra Palace, London | 15 |
| 'For free trade', 16 June 1904, Cheetham Hill, Manchester | 17 |
| 'Dear food for the millions', 13 May 1905, Manchester | 19 |
| 'British hospitality', 9 October 1905, Cheetham Hill, Manchester | 20 |
| 'No more garters for dukes', 14 December 1905, Manchester | 21 |
| 'The gift of England', 31 July 1906, House of Commons | 22 |
| 'The cause of the left-out millions', 11 October 1906, Glasgow | 23 |
| George Bernard Shaw: 'A volcano', 22 October 1906, Free Trade Hall, Manchester | 26 |
| 'My African journey', 18 January 1908, National Liberal Club, London | 26 |
| Socialism: 'All yours is mine!', 22 January 1908, Cheetham, Manchester | 27 |
| The pen: 'Liberator of man and of nations', 17 February 1908, London | 29 |
| 'What is society?', 4 May 1908, Kinnaird Hall, Dundee | 31 |
| 'I am the Board of Trade', 4 February 1909, Newcastle-upon-Tyne | 32 |
| The Budget: 'Cannot afford to live or die', 22 May 1909, Manchester | 33 |
| 'A violent rupture of constitutional custom', 4 September 1909, Leicester | 34 |
| 'The most ancient and the most glorious monarchy', 4 December 1909, Southport | 36 |
| 'The upkeep of the aristocracy', 17 December 1909, Burnley, Lancs | 37 |
| 'For soldiers to fire on the people ...', 7 February 1911, House of Commons | 39 |
| Unemployment insurance, 22 May 1911, House of Commons | 41 |
| National rail strike, 22 August 1911, House of Commons | 43 |
| 'The maintenance of naval supremacy', 9 November 1911, Guildhall, London | 45 |
| 'Why should not Ireland have her chance?', 8 February 1912, Belfast | 47 |
| 'An age of incipient violence', 18 March 1912, House of Commons | 50 |
| 'Air power', 10 November 1913, Guildhall, London | 54 |
| 'Unconquerable and incomparable', 4 March 1914, London | 55 |
| 'The world is armed as it was never armed before', 17 March 1914, House of Commons | 56 |
| 'The war will be long and sombre', 11 September 1914, London | 58 |
| The Dardanelles, 5 June 1915, Dundee | 61 |
| 'Take Constantinople!', 15 November 1915, House of Commons | 64 |
2. | Oblivion and Redemption 1916-29 | |
| 'The hardest of tests', 23 May 1916, House of Commons | 69 |
| 'Grappling with the most terrible foe', 31 May 1916, House of Commons | 70 |
| 'Perils, sorrows and sufferings', 10 December 1917, Bedford | 74 |
| 'The war is won!', 16 December 1918, Connaught Rooms, London | 75 |
| 'Bolshevist atrocities', 11 April 1919, Connaught Rooms, London | 77 |
| Farewell to 'the beer of Old England', 18 July 1919, London | 78 |
| 'The Jews should have a National Home', 31 March 1921, Jerusalem | 79 |
| Lenin, 8 June 1921, Manchester | 80 |
| 'The culture and glories of the Arab race', 14 June 1921, House of Commons | 82 |
| 'The dreary steeples of Fermanagh and Tyrone', 16 February 1922, House of Commons | 85 |
| Conservative once more, 16 September 1925, Birmingham | 85 |
| 'The follies of Socialism', 11 December 1925, Battersea | 89 |
| 'Artful Dodger!', 22 April 1926, House of Commons | 90 |
| 'The blushing Liberal bride', 22 October 1928, Chingford | 91 |
| 'A disarmament fable', 24 October 1928, Aldersbrook | 92 |
3. | The Wilderness Years 1930-39 | |
| 'A seditious Middle Temple lawyer', 23 February 1931, Epping | 97 |
| 'Abandoning India', 18 March 1931, Royal Albert Hall, London | 97 |
| Prohibition, November/December 1931, Lecture Tour of the United States | 99 |
| 'Bands of sturdy Teutonic youths', 23 November 1932, House of Commons | 100 |
| 'Pontifical, anonymous mugwumpery', 22 February 1933, House of Commons | 102 |
| 'England', 24 April 1933, Royal Society of St George, London | 103 |
| 'Wars come very suddenly', 7 February 1934, House of Commons | 105 |
| 'Germany is arming', 8 March 1934, House of Commons | 107 |
| 'We lie within ... striking distance', 16 November 1934, Broadcast, London | 109 |
| 'A corridor of deepening and darkening danger', 31 May 1935, House of Commons | 111 |
| 'You have unsettled everything ...', 5 June 1935, House of Commons | 115 |
| 'I am a Treaty man', 10 July 1935, House of Commons | 117 |
| 'Naval security', 24 July 1935, Harlow | 119 |
| 'Abyssinia has been invaded', 8 October 1935, Chingford | 119 |
| 'Nazidom ... with all its hatreds', 24 October 1935, House of Commons | 121 |
| 'Germany ... fears no one', March 1936, House of Commons | 124 |
| The Jews: 'Their blood and race', 24 March 1936, House of Commons | 128 |
| 'Great hammers descending day and night', 26 March 1936, House of Commons | 130 |
| 'Hitler has torn up the treaties', 6 April 1936, House of Commons | 133 |
| 'Thank God for the French Army', 24 September 1936, Paris | 135 |
| Lawrence of Arabia, 3 October 1936, Oxford | 139 |
| 'The locust years', 12 November 1936, House of Commons | 142 |
| 'Approaching the most dangerous moment', 25 November 1936, London | 154 |
| 'The abdication of King Edward VIII', 10 December 1936, House of Commons | 156 |
| Rudyard Kipling, 17 November 1937, Grosvenor House, London | 158 |
| Austria annexed, 14 March 1938, House of Commons | 159 |
| 'I have watched this famous island ...', 24 March 1938, House of Commons | 163 |
| 'The sentinel towers of the Western approaches', 5 May 1938, House of Commons | 167 |
| 'Save mankind from martyrdom', 26 September 1938, London | 170 |
| 'A total and unmitigated defeat', 5 October 1938, House of Commons | 171 |
| 'The lights are going out', 16 October 1938, Broadcast to US, London | 182 |
| 'The bitter fruits of Munich', 14 March 1939, Waltham Abbey | 185 |
| 'The surge of unity and of duty', 20 April 1939, Canada Club, London | 187 |
| 'Repudiation of the Balfour Declaration', 23 May 1939, House of Commons | 188 |
| 'A hush over Europe', 8 August 1939, Broadcast to US, London | 191 |
4. | The Glory Years 1939-45 | |
| War, 3 September 1939, House of Commons | 197 |
| Russia: 'A riddle, wrapped in a mystery', 1 October 1939, Broadcast, London | 199 |
| 'The Navy's here!', 23 February 1940, Guildhall, London | 201 |
| 'Blood, toil, tears and sweat', 13 May 1940, House of Commons | 204 |
| 'Arm yourselves, and be ye men of valour!', 19 May 1940, Broadcast, London | 206 |
| 'Wars are not won by evacuations', 4 June 1940, House of Commons | 210 |
| 'The news from France is very bad', 17 June 1940, Broadcast, London | 218 |
| 'This was their finest hour', 18 June 1940, House of Commons | 219 |
| Destruction of the French Fleet, 4 July 1940, House of Commons | 229 |
| 'The War of the Unknown Warriors', 14 July 1940, Broadcast, London | 234 |
| 'The Few', 20 August 1940, House of Commons | 237 |
| Fifty American destroyers, 5 September 1940, House of Commons | 249 |
| 'These cruel, wanton ... bombings', 11 September 1940, Broadcast, London | 250 |
| 'We will all go down fighting to the end', 17 September 1940, House of Commons | 253 |
| 'We can take it!' 8 October 1940, House of Commons | 255 |
| 'Dieu protege la France', 21 October 1940, Broadcast, London | 257 |
| 'Give us the tools', 9 February 1941, Broadcast, London | 259 |
| 'This Battle of the Atlantic', 18 March 1941, Pilgrims' Society, London | 262 |
| Yugoslavia invaded, 9 April 1941, House of Commons | 265 |
| 'Westward look, the land is bright', 27 April 1941, Broadcast, London | 266 |
| Vote of Confidence, 7 May 1941, House of Commons | 275 |
| 'The Bismarck is sunk!', 27 May 1941, House of Commons | 281 |
| 'Our solid, stubborn strength', 12 June 1941, London | 283 |
| 'The Old Lion', 16 June 1941, Broadcast, London | 286 |
| Alliance with Russia, 22 June 1941, Broadcast, London | 289 |
| 'The grit and stamina of Londoners', 14 July 1941, County Hall, London | 294 |
| The Atlantic Charter, 24 August 1941, Broadcast, London | 297 |
| 'We are still captain of our souls', 9 September 1941, House of Commons | 305 |
| 'Never give in!', 29 October 1941, Harrow School | 306 |
| The Lend-Lease Bill, 10 November 1941, Mansion House, London | 308 |
| War with Japan, 8 December 1941, House of Commons | 313 |
| Joint Session of Congress, 26 December 1941, Washington, DC | 315 |
| 'Some chicken! Some neck!', 30 December 1941, Parliament, Ottawa | 323 |
| 'I demand a Vote of Confidence', 27 January 1942, House of Commons | 324 |
| 'Singapore has fallen', 15 February 1942, Broadcast, London | 329 |
| Prime Minister for two years, 10 May 1942, Broadcast, London | 330 |
| Motion of Censure, 2 July 1942, House of Commons | 339 |
| 'The bright gleam of victory', 10 November 1942, Mansion House, London | 341 |
| 'The frontiers of deliverance', 29 November 1942, World Broadcast, London | 344 |
| 'The Desert Army', 3 February 1943, Tripoli | 345 |
| Tribute to Montgomery and Alexander, 11 February 1943, House of Commons | 349 |
| 'Heavier work lies ahead', 19 May 1943, Congress, Washington, DC | 350 |
| 'We expect no reward', 30 June 1943, Guildhall, London | 355 |
| 'The gift of a common tongue', 6 September 1943, Harvard, Boston | 356 |
| 'A sense of crowd and urgency', 28 October 1943, House of Commons | 358 |
| 'The hour of our greatest effort', 26 March 1944, Broadcast, London | 361 |
| D-Day, 6 June 1944, House of Commons | 362 |
| 'The price in blood ... for the soil of France', 28 September 1944, House of Commons | 363 |
| 'Democracy is no harlot', 8 December 1944, House of Commons | 369 |
| 'We demand unconditional surrender', 18 January 1945, House of Commons | 370 |
| 'Greece forever!', 14 February 1945, Constitution Square, Athens | 372 |
| The Yalta Conference, 27 February 1945, House of Commons | 373 |
| Lloyd George, 28 March 1945, House of Commons | 378 |
| President Roosevelt, 17 April 1945, House of Commons | 382 |
| 'No words can ever express the horror', 19 April 1945, House of Commons | 386 |
| Victory in Europe, 8 May 1945, House of Commons and Broadcast, London | 387 |
| 'This is your victory', 8 May 1945, Ministry of Health, London | 390 |
| 'Forward, till the whole task is done', 13 May 1945, Broadcast, London | 392 |
| Back to party politics, 4 June 1945, Broadcast, London | 395 |
| General Eisenhower, 12 June 1945, Mansion House, London | 398 |
| 'Dear Desert Rats', 21 July 1945, Winston Club, Berlin | 400 |
| Resignation, 26 July 1945, 10 Downing Street | 401 |
5. | The Sunset Years 1945-63 | |
| The atomic bomb, 6 August 1945, 10 Downing Street | 405 |
| Surrender of Japan, 15 August 1945, House of Commons | 407 |
| 'Government of the people', 16 August 1945, House of Commons | 409 |
| Alamein, 25 October 1945, Royal Albert Hall, London | 410 |
| 'We did not flinch', 31 October 1945, Harrow School | 411 |
| 'The unnecessary war', 16 November 1945, Belgian Parliament, Brussels | 411 |
| 'An Iron Curtain has descended', 5 March 1946, Fulton, Missouri | 413 |
| 'The tragedy of Europe', 9 May 1946, The Hague, Holland | 424 |
| Palestine, 1 August 1946, House of Commons | 425 |
| A 'United States of Europe', 19 September 1946, Zurich, Switzerland | 427 |
| 'A property-owning democracy', 5 October 1946, Blackpool | 431 |
| The Communist menace, 24 October 1946, Loughton | 433 |
| Palestine: 'Blood and shame', 31 January 1947, House of Commons | 434 |
| 'United Europe', 14 May 1947, Royal Albert Hall, London | 436 |
| The rights of the British, 4 October 1947, Brighton | 444 |
| 'Shabby moneylenders!', 28 October 1947, House of Commons | 445 |
| 'Socialism is the philosophy of failure', 28 May 1948, Perth | 446 |
| 'When they get the atomic bomb', 9 October 1948, Llandudno, Wales | 447 |
| The North Atlantic Treaty, 12 May 1949, House of Commons | 449 |
| The Berlin Airlift, 21 July 1949, House of Commons | 451 |
| 'Prenez-garde! Je vais parler en francais', 12 August 1949, Strasbourg, France | 451 |
| 'Watch out! I am going to speak in French' (translation), 12 August 1949, Strasbourg, France | 452 |
| 'English literature is a glorious inheritance', 2 November 1949, London | 453 |
| 'Our Socialist masters', 9 February 1950, Devonport | 453 |
| 'An experiment in freedom', 18 May 1950, Edinburgh | 462 |
| 'This century of tragedy and storm', 4 July 1950, Dorchester Hotel, London | 462 |
| 'Renewing the glory of our island home', 21 July 1951, Woodford | 465 |
| 'Regain our independence', 23 October 1951, Plymouth | 469 |
| 'The valiant champion of freedom', 9 November 1951, Guildhall, London | 471 |
| 'We must not lose hope!', 17 January 1952, Congress, Washington, DC | 473 |
| King George VI, 7 February 1952, Broadcast, London | 476 |
| 'The treacherous trap-door', 11 June 1952, Savoy Hotel, London | 479 |
| 'The spirit of England', 23 April 1953, London, and Broadcast | 482 |
| 'The Crown and Parliament', 27 May 1953, St Stephen's, Westminster | 483 |
| 'Supreme catastrophe', 3 November 1953, House of Commons | 485 |
| 'A calmer and kindlier age', 9 November 1954, Guildhall, London | 487 |
| 'The nation ... had the lion-heart', 30 November 1954, Westminster Hall | 488 |
| 'Never despair!', 1 March 1955, House of Commons | 491 |
| 'The Queen!', 4 April 1955, 10 Downing Street | 498 |
| 'Let us go boldly forward', 21 June 1955, Guildhall, London | 499 |
| Honorary US Citizenship, 9 April 1963, The White House, Washington, DC | 501 |
Appendix | The Churchill Center and Societies | 505 |
| Index | 507 |