ABSTRACT

This ambitious survey covers all aspects of the period in which English society acquired its modern shape -- industrial rather than agricultural, urban rather than rural, democratic in its institutions, and middle class rather than aristocratic in the control of political power. For this revised edition the footnotes and bibliography have been fully updated, and the entire text has been reset in a larger and more attractive format. An ideal introduction to the subject, it masters a huge amount of material through its clear structure, sensible judgements and approachable style.

part One|200 pages

The Victorian Turning Point, 1868-1880

chapter 1|2 pages

Introduction

‘The revolution of our times'

chapter 2|17 pages

Economic Life

‘The full morning of our national prosperity'

chapter 3|24 pages

Social Life

‘Every man has somebody beneath him'

chapter 4|23 pages

Town Life

‘Where will London end?'

chapter 5|12 pages

Religious Life

‘Very hard to come at the actual belief of any man'

chapter 6|31 pages

Cultural Life

‘To morally transform the world'

chapter 7|25 pages

Government: 1. Developments

‘A country successful in politics'

chapter 8|8 pages

Government: 2. Personalities

‘Not in all respects well qualified'

chapter 9|24 pages

Government: 3. Democracy

‘The Niagara leap'

chapter 10|14 pages

Domestic Policy

‘My mission is to pacify Ireland'

chapter 11|6 pages

Imperial Policy

‘Vastness of dimension'

chapter 12|12 pages

Foreign Policy

‘Peace, I hope, with honour'

part Two|165 pages

Fin De Siècle, 1880-1900

chapter 13|2 pages

Introduction

‘An age of rapid results'

chapter 14|30 pages

Economic Life

‘What makes the difference between good and bad times?'

chapter 15|9 pages

Social Life

‘The mistress never converses with her servants'

chapter 16|12 pages

Town Life

‘A nice little back garden'

chapter 17|7 pages

Religious Life

‘Post-Christian days'

chapter 18|18 pages

Cultural Life

‘Art for art's sake’

chapter 19|16 pages

Government: 1. Developments

‘We are all socialists now'

chapter 20|4 pages

Government: 2. Personalities

‘That indefinable something'

chapter 21|32 pages

Government: 3. Democracy

‘Is this democracy to prove fatal to England?'

chapter 22|17 pages

Domestic Policy

‘Three millions are disloyal'

chapter 23|9 pages

Imperial Policy

‘Pegging out claims for the future'

chapter 24|7 pages

Foreign Policy

‘Regard him as insane'

part Three|135 pages

Edwardian England, 1901-1914

chapter 25|3 pages

Introduction

‘They place the golden age behind them'

chapter 26|19 pages

Economic Life

‘An old man's world would not be a beautiful one’

chapter 27|7 pages

Social Life

‘New expenses have come into the category of necessities'

chapter 28|15 pages

Town Life

‘The largest secular change of a thousand years'

chapter 29|4 pages

Religious Life

‘A non-dogmatic affirmation of general kindliness'

chapter 30|17 pages

Cultural Life

‘I suffer nothing from reading the Daily Mail'

chapter 31|14 pages

Government

chapter 32|18 pages

Tariff Reform Versus Social Reform

‘Untrodden fields of British politics'

chapter 33|5 pages

Imperial Policy

‘Will the Empire live?'

chapter 34|12 pages

Foreign Policy

‘Peace at that price would be a humiliation'

chapter 35|19 pages

Crisis

‘Within measurable distance of civil war'