Winston Churchill
Sir Winston Leonard Spencer Churchill was one of the most energetic and vital of all British leaders. Born in 1874 to an English father and American mother, he embodied the highest qualities of both peoples.
His most obvious qualities were courage and imagination. Less obvious, but no less important to the outcome of his seat of power as the Prime Minister and Minister of Defense for Great Britain during World War II, was his intellect - powerful, original, and creatively fertile.
This study of applicable historical speeches, offered during one of the most terrifying political eras of the 20th century, reveals what is imminently true of Churchill: history has revealed all there is to know about the man; there was no disguise.
Analysis Vehicle
This study will dissect Churchill's speech ostensibly labeled "Never Give In, Never, Never, Never," given on October 29, 1941 to the students and staff at his alma mater: the Harrow School and provide support from other speeches given at times of military decision, and imminent cultural demise. This paper will also seek to explore the insights this speech affords today's scholars, philosophers, and military experts.
Upon visiting Harrow School on this notable occasion, purportedly to hear traditional songs again, he found that an additional verse had been added to one of his favorites. The new verse sang:
Not less we praise in darker days
The leader of our nation,
And Churchill's name shall win acclaim
From each new generation.
For you have power in danger's hour
Our freedom to defend, Sir!
Though long the fight we know that right
Will triumph in the end, Sir!
Historical Background
Churchill was under tremendous political and personal pressure during this period in history. Under political pundit attacks, he was accused of making a fatal error in judgment when resisting Hitler and a National Socialist-dominated Europe.
Socialism and "Keynesian collectivism" had dominated the political economy of England for more than a generation; Churchill fought for conservativism and maintaining the dignity and form of the British empire. Equally concerning to him was maintaining Britain as a visible and civilized power among the world's powerful entities (at that time, the United States and the U.S.S.R.), establishing a union of a "genuine league of free nations, called Arms and the Covenant," and cared so deeply about the creation of a large organism which would unite liberal and civilized people that he was willing to see the leadership of English-speaking people pass to Americans, if that was required to ensure survival of political decency and the restraints of civilization.
Churchill was faced with major socio-economic and political responsibilities during World War II. He clearly understood that Nazi domination of Europe would have created a situation intolerable to Great Britain's principles and way of life. Hitler would have intensified his megalomaniac repression of conservative, liberal, democrat, patriot, Jew, and Christian alike and Churchill knew the pressure on Britain to conform would have been a crushing one.
History records the accuracy of this position when, in his speech of October 5, 1938 - regarding the Munich Pact - Churchill, with his usual broad vision and insight - said:
there can never be friendship between the British democracy and the Nazi power, that power which spurns Christian ethics, which cheers its onward course by a barbarous paganism, which derives strength and perverted pleasure from persecution, and uses, as we have seen with pitiless brutality, the threat of murderous force. That power cannot be the trusted friend of the British democracy
We do not want to be led upon the high road to becoming a satellite of the German Nazi system of European domination. In a very few years, perhaps in a very few months, we shall be confronted with demands with which we shall no doubt be invited to comply. Those demands may affect the surrender of territory or the surrender of liberty. I foresee and foretell that the policy of submission will carry with it restrictions upon the freedom of speech and debate in Parliament, on public platforms, and discussions in the Press, for it will be said -- indeed, I hear it said sometimes now -- that we cannot allow the Nazi system of dictatorship to be criticized...
It would help to remember that Churchill was an intense patriot, and he loved his country more than anything else in the world. This individual was also a great believer in the greatness and immensity of his country, and he was constantly aware of the historic role that England had played in Europe, in the Empire, and also in the world in general. Churchill was an individual who thrived
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