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Winston Churchill (1874 - 1965)

The Right Honourable Sir Winston Leonard Spencer Churchill, the son of Lord Randolph Churchill and an American mother, was educated at Harrow and Sandhurst. After a brief but eventful career in the army, he became a Conservative Member of Parliament in 1900. He held many high posts in Liberal and Conservative governments during the first three decades of the century. At the outbreak of the Second World War, he was appointed First Lord of the Admiralty - a post which he had earlier held from 1911 to 1915. In May, 1940, he became Prime Minister and Minister of Defence and remained in office until 1945. He took over the premiership again in the Conservative victory of 1951 and resigned in 1955. However, he remained a Member of Parliament until the general election of 1964, when he did not seek re-election. Queen Elizabeth II conferred on Churchill the dignity of Knighthood and invested him with the insignia of the Order of the Garter in 1953. Among the other countless honours and decorations he received, special mention should be made of the honorary citizenship of the United States which President Kennedy conferred on him in 1963. Churchill's literary career began with campaign reports: The Story of the Malakand Field Force (1898) and The River War (1899), an account of the campaign in the Sudan and the Battle of Omdurman. In 1900, he published his only novel, Savrola, and, six years later, his first major work, the biography of his father, Lord Randolph Churchill. His other famous biography, the life of his great ancestor, the Duke of Marlborough, was published in four volumes between 1933 and 1938. Churchill's history of the First World War appeared in four volumes under the title of The World Crisis (1923-29); his memoirs of the Second World War ran to six volumes (1948-1953/54). After his retirement from office, Churchill wrote a History of the English-speaking Peoples (4 vols., 1956-58). His magnificent oratory survives in a dozen volumes of speeches, among them The Unrelenting Struggle (1942), The Dawn of Liberation (1945), and Victory (1946). Churchill, a gifted amateur painter, wrote Painting as a Pastime (1948). An autobiographical account of his youth, My Early Life, appeared in 1930.
From Nobel Lectures, Literature 1901-1967.
Winston Churchill died in 1965.


animus est quod opus est ad surgendum loquendumque.Sed animus est etiam quod opus est ad sedendum audiendumque
artificiosus vapor misericordiora arma est quam pyrobulus potens atque hostem cogit ad consilium sequendum minoribus detrimentis quam aliis bellicis instrumentis
belli captivus homo est qui te interficere conatur, sed non potest et postea ex te petit ne interficias
belli temporibus verum tam pretiosum est ut mendaciorum vallo tuendum sit
ex alcoolo excepi magis quam alcoolum ex me
homines in tribus generibus possunt congregari: fatigati ut moriantur, taedio affecti ut moriantur, anxii ut moriantur
homini publico prospiciendum est quod eveniet mane, postero mense annoque futuro et explicandum postea cur hoc non evenerit
inventio nos consolatur quod esse non possumus; facetiae quod sumus
Italici follis ludos perdunt tamquam essent bella et bella tamquam follis ludos
Maxime faveo vaporis usui in barbaras nationes
mea verba iterum edere numquam mihi satietatem creavit
nobis diffidendum est inutilibus inventionibus, maxime cum a ratione ductae sunt
nulla pecuniae collocatio cuivis civitati melior est quam lac in pueris ponere
optimum argumentum contra populi imperium est colloquium quinque minutorum cum communi electore
privato consilio semper paratus sum ad discendum, quamquam non semper me iuvat praecipi
si leges decem milia sunt, legum obsequium deletur
tantum confido rationibus quas adulteravi
tempus cunctationis, mediorum consiliorum, rationum inutilium et consolatoriarum, morarum desiturum est.Pro hoc tempus consequentiarum ingredimur
tyranni omnia expediunt praeter gravissimum: se ipsos