Vanity Fair - Clergy. 'If eloquence could justify injustice he would have saved the Irish Church.' Bishop of Petersborough. 3 July 1869
1869
2
Carlo Pellegrini, 1839–1889
Politicians - Vanity Fair. 'He improves if possible, but he accepts always the accomplised fact.' Earl Kimberly. 16 July 1869
1869
3
Carlo Pellegrini, 1839–1889
Vanity Fair - Clergy. 'Not a brawler.' Bishop of Oxford. 24 July 1869
1869
4
Carlo Pellegrini, 1839–1889
Politicians - Vanity Fair. 'Let arts and commerce, laws and learning die, but leave us still our old nobility.' The Rt. Hon. Lord John J.R. Manners. 20 November 1869
1869
5
Carlo Pellegrini, 1839–1889
Politicians - Vanity Fair. 'Pour encourager les autres'. The Rt. Hon. James Stansfeld. 10 April 1869
1869
6
Carlo Pellegrini, 1839–1889
Politicians - Vanity Fair. 'An eminent Christian Man'. Lord Westbury. 15 May 1869
1869
7
Carlo Pellegrini, 1839–1889
Politicians - Vanity Fair. 'Proud and sincere, yet liberal and just, he refused to serve under the most humble of premiers.' The Duke of Somerset. 7 August 1869
1869
8
Carlo Pellegrini, 1839–1889
Politicians - Vanity Fair - 'When Birth cannot lead Brains must'. Lord Cairns. July 31, 1869
1869
9
Carlo Pellegrini, 1839–1889
Politicians - Vanity Fair -'To say that he is the best foreign minister in the country is not much as foreign ministers go; but as go it is a great deal.' The Earl of Clarendon. April 24, 1869
1869
10
Carlo Pellegrini, 1839–1889
Politicians - Vanity Fair - 'The Whole life of that great party to which I thought I had the honour to belong was nothing but a mere organized hypocrisy'. Lord Carnarvon. Sept 11, 1869
1869
11
Carlo Pellegrini, 1839–1889
Politicians - Vanity Fair - 'If he is not an advanced liberal, it is for want of advancing himself'. Rt. Hon. W.E. Forster. March 6, 1869
1869
12
Carlo Pellegrini, 1839–1889
Politicians - Vanity Fair - 'A philosophic liberal'. Mr. M.E. Grant-Duff. October 2, 1869
1869
13
Carlo Pellegrini, 1839–1889
The ablest Professor in the Cabinet of the Tact by which Power is Kept: It is his Mission to Counteract the Talk by Which it is Won and Lost, Earl Granville, from Vanity Fair, Politicians
1869
14
Carlo Pellegrini, 1839–1889
Politicians - Vanity Fair - 'Will the sentimental orator be lost in the practical Minister, or will both the extinguished?' The Rt. Hon. John Bright. February 13, 1869
1869
15
Carlo Pellegrini, 1839–1889
Politicians - Vanity Fair - 'A privileged person'. Earl Grey. May 8, 1869
1869
16
Carlo Pellegrini, 1839–1889
Politicians - Vanity Fair - 'The ablest professor in the cabinet of the tact by which power is kept. It is his mission to counteract the talk by which it is won and lost. Earl Granville. March 13, 1869
1869
17
Carlo Pellegrini, 1839–1889
Vanity Fair: Royalty; 'God Bless the Duke of Argyll', The Duke of Argyll, April 17, 1869
1869
18
Carlo Pellegrini, 1839–1889
Prime Minsters - Vanity Fair. 'The greatest liberal stateman of modern times'. Earl Russell. 5 June 1869
1869
19
Carlo Pellegrini, 1839–1889
Prime Ministers - Vanity Fair. 'He is too honest a Tory for his party and his time.' The Marquis of Salisbury. 10 July 1869
1869
20
Carlo Pellegrini, 1839–1889
Prime Ministers - Vanity Fair. 'It is his mission to stem the tide of democracy.' The Earl of Derby. 29 May 1869