Perilous Question: Reform or Revolution? Britain on the Brink, 1832

Perilous Question: Reform or Revolution? Britain on the Brink, 1832

by Antonia Fraser
Perilous Question: Reform or Revolution? Britain on the Brink, 1832

Perilous Question: Reform or Revolution? Britain on the Brink, 1832

by Antonia Fraser

Paperback(First Trade Paper Edition)

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Overview

Antonia Fraser's Perilous Question is a dazzling re-creation of the tempestuous two-year period in Britain's history leading up to the passing of the Great Reform Bill in 1832, a narrative which at times reads like a political thriller.

The era, beginning with the accession of William IV, is evoked in the novels of Trollope and Thackeray, and described by the young Charles Dickens as a cub reporter. It is lit with notable characters. The reforming heroes are the Whig aristocrats led by Lord Grey, members of the richest and most landed cabinet in history yet determined to bring liberty, which would whittle away their own power, to the country. The all-too-conservative opposition was headed by the Duke of Wellington, supported by the intransigent Queen Adelaide, with hereditary memories of the French Revolution. Finally, there were revolutionaries, like William Cobbett, the author of Rural Rides, the radical tailor Francis Place, and Thomas Attwood of Birmingham, the charismatic orator. The contest often grew violent. There were urban riots put down by soldiers and agricultural riots led by the mythical Captain Swing.

The underlying grievance was the fate of the many disfranchised people. They were ignored by a medieval system of electoral representation that gave, for example, no votes to those who lived in the new industrial cities of Manchester, Leeds, Sheffield, and Birmingham, while allocating two parliamentary representatives to a village long since fallen into the sea and, most notoriously, Old Sarum, a green mound in a field. Lord John Russell, a Whig minister, said long afterwards that it was the only period when he genuinely felt popular revolution threatened the country. The Duke of Wellington declared intractably in November 1830 that "The beginning of reform is the beginning of revolution." So it seemed that disaster must fall on the British Parliament, or the monarchy, or both.

The question was: Could a rotten system reform itself in time? On June 7, 1832, the date of the extremely reluctant royal assent by William IV to the Great Reform Bill, it did. These events led to a total change in the way Britain was governed, and set the stage for its growth as the world's most successful industrial power; admired, among other things, for its traditions of good governance -- a two-year revolution that Antonia Fraser brings to vivid dramatic life.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781610393782
Publisher: PublicAffairs
Publication date: 05/06/2014
Edition description: First Trade Paper Edition
Pages: 352
Product dimensions: 5.70(w) x 8.80(h) x 1.00(d)

About the Author

Antonia Fraser has written several historical biographies which have been international bestsellers, since Mary, Queen of Scots published in 1969. These include Marie Antoinette, The Six Wives of Henry VIII, and Cromwell. Other historical works include The Weaker Vessel: Woman's Lot in Seventeenth Century England, and Faith and Treason: the Gunpowder Plot. Antonia Fraser was president of English Pen, the world-wide writers' organization for free speech, and is now a vice-president. She has received many prizes, including the Wolfson History Award, the Norton Medlicott Historical Association Medal, the Franco-British Literary Prize, and the St. Louis Literary Award. She was made a D.B.E (Dame) in 2011 for services to literature. She was married to the Nobel Laureate, Harold Pinter, who died in 2008.

Table of Contents

List of Illustrations ix

Author's Note xi

Prologue: A new King, a new people 1

Chapter 1 The clamour 13

Chapter 2 I will pronounce the word 30

Chapter 3 Believing in the Whigs 50

Chapter 4 The gentlemen of England 69

Chapter 5 Russell's Purge 86

Chapter 6 King as angel 99

Chapter 7 Away went Gilpin 115

Chapter 8 Confound their politics 132

Chapter 9 What have the Lords done? 151

Chapter 10 A scene of desolation 167

Chapter 11 The fearful alternative 184

Chapter 12 Bouncing Bill 202

Chapter 13 Seventh of May 217

Chapter 14 Prithee return to me 236

Chapter 15 Bright day of liberty 249

Epilogue: This great national exploit 260

References 279

Sources 289

Index 297

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