The Last Will and Testament of Cecil J. Rhodes PDF
The Last Will and Testament of Cecil J. Rhodes PDF
The Last Will and Testament of Cecil J. Rhodes PDF
UNIVERSITY*
CALIFORNIA
f SAN DIEGO
Photograph by] [ <K. and D. Downey.
LONDON
"REVIEW OF REVIEWS" OFFICE
NORFOLK STREET, W.C.
1902
LONDON I
responsible but
THE EDITOR.
.,
IV. His SPEECHES . . .
139
PART
INDEX .........
III. THE CLOSING SCENE . . .
177
193
LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS.
PART I.
PAGE
MR. RHODES'S BURIAL PLACE: THE SUMMIT OF "WORLD'S
VIEW" .2
MR. RHODES'S WESTACRE FARM IN THE MATOPPOS ... 6
THE INYANGA FARM
GROOTE SCHUUR .........
APPROACH TO GROOTE SCHUUR
8
10
12
PART II.
CHAPTER
PORTRAIT OF DR. JAMESON .... 67
75
II. PORTRAIT OF MR. RHODES AS A BOY . .
78
HOUSE IN WHICH MR. RHODES WAS BORN .
87
PORTRAITS OF MR. AND MRS. MAGUIRE . .
92
PORTRAIT OF MR. F. E. GARRETT . no
x LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS.
PART III.
...
. .
PART I.
I am
a natural-born British subject and I now
declare that I have adopted and acquired and
hereby adopt and acquire and intend to retain
Rhodesia as my domicile (a).
Matoppos
"
(I))
Mr. Bertram Mitford says : For grim, gloomy savagery
of solitude it is probable that the stupendous rock wilderness
known as the Matoppo Hills is unsurpassed throughout earth's
surface. Strictly speaking, the term 'hills' scarcely applies
to this marvellous range, which is rather an expanse of granite
rocks extending some seventy or eighty miles by forty or fifty,
piled in titanic proportions and bizarre confusion, over what
would otherwise be a gently undulating surface, forming a kind
of island as it were, surrounded by beautiful rolling country,
green, smiling, and in parts thickly bushed. High on the out-
side ridge of this remarkable range, about twenty miles distant
from Bulawayo, towards which it faces, there rises a pile of
granite boulders, huge, solid, compact. It is a natural
structure ; an imposing and dominating one withal, and
appropriately so, for this is the sepulchre of the warrior King
Umzilikazi, founder and first monarch of the Matabele nation."
" It would
Rhodesia says :
appear, according to the dis-
covery of a Native Commissioner, that the hill on the summit
of which the remains of Cecil Rhodes have been laid is known
1
in the vernacular as
'
Malindid/imo. The literal translation
of this is given as The Home of the Spirit of My Forefathers,'
'
i i 11 r 11 i Bulawayo
money as they shall carefully ascertain and in Fund,
their uncontrolled discretion consider ample and
sufficientby its investments to yield income
amounting to the sum of ,4,000 sterling per
annum and not less and I direct my Trustees
to invest the same sum and the said sum and
<u
5
.a
HIS PROPERTY IN RHODESIA. 7
.a
rt
h
GROOTE SCHUUR. 1 1
(i.)
The said property (excepting any Conditions.
where poets or artists could live and look across to the blue
mountain distance ; a University, where young men could be
surrounded with the best of nature and of art ; a lion-house, a
feature of which was to have been a long open colonnade,
where the people could at once see the king of beasts and the
"
lordliest of mountains ;
the Kimberley Bath," with its white
marble colonnades embedded in a green oasis of orange grove
and vine trellis, looking to the north over illimitable desert.
Such things would perhaps occur to most men, but with him
GROOTE SCHUUR. 17
A The Library.
Showing stone figure (Phcenician hawk} from ancient gold workings in Rhodesia.
\
'9
The Billiard-room.
I
subject to the conditions and
direct that
trusts hereinbefore contained the said Federal
Government shall from the time it shall be con-
stituted have the management administration and
control of the said devise and legacy and that
my Trustees shall as soon as may be thereafter
vest and pay the devise and legacy given by the
two last preceding clauses hereof in and to such
Government if a corporate body capable of
accepting and holding the same or if not then
in some suitable corporate body so capable
named by such Government and that in the
meantime my Trustees shall in their uncontrolled
discretion manage administer and control the said
devise and legacy.
(/;)
In the list of the Masters of Arts of Oriel College, in
the year 1881, occurs this entry: "Rhodes, Cecil John," to
which a note is added, "late Premier of the Cape Colony."
Tradition says that Oriel was first founded by Edward II.,
who vowed as he fled from Bannockburn he would found a
religious house in the Virgin's honour if only Our Lady would
save from the pursuing Scot. Edward III. gave the University
the. mansion called Le Oriole which stood on the present site
of the College.
A portrait of Sir Walter Raleigh hangs on the walls of the
College Hall.
The present income of the College is said to be not more
than ,7,500 per annum. The revenue of the twenty-one
Colleges of Oxford is 206, 102, or less than ^10,000 each.
The present Provost of Oriel is David Binning Monro he :
poor man can never get the full value of an Oxford training."
THE WILL OF CECIL J. RHODES.
; '--
C 2
26
Copyright reserved.}
I
hope withdrawing them or their sympathies
from the land of their adoption or birth.
Now therefore I direct my Trustees as soon Three-year
as may be after my death and either simultaneously scholar-
or gradually as they shall find convenient and if ships.
to keep the scholars the whole year through, both in term time
at the University and in vacation elsewhere, or merely during
" If
the University years of six months. the latter," he said,
"
then ^300 a year will keep them comfortably enough at
Christ Church, and will enable them to enter into the social
and varied life of the House. But if this amount is also to
serve for vacation expenses, the balance left for the University
will make it impossible, or, at any rate, inadvisable, for them
to come to Christ Church."
A senior member of Oriel says Mr. Rhodes contemplated
that the sum he provides shall be sufficient to maintain the
recipients, together with their personal expenses, travelling,
clothing, etc., and to enable them to mix freely in the society
of the place and take a position amongst men who are well
equipped in this world's goods. An ordinary young man at
Oxford I don't say at this college would be comfortably off
with an allowance of ^250 a year, and many parents allow
THE SCHOLARSHIPS AT OXFORD. 31
r
THE SCHOLARSHIPS AT OXFORD, 33
POPULATION.
WHITE. COLOURED.
CANADA Nova Scotia 459.000
New Brunswick 331,000
Prince Edward Island ...
103,250 about
Manitoba 246,500 ...
100,000
North-West Territories ...
220,000
British Columbia 190,000
34 THE WILL OF CECIL J. RHODES.
"
times hereinafter refer to as the American
Scholarships."
I appropriate two of the American Scholar-
STATE.
THE SCHOLARSHIPS AT OXFORD. 35
vided that if
any of the said Territories shall
in my lifetime be admitted
a State the as
Scholarships appropriated to such Territory
shall be appropriated to such State and that
,
, ,
had made instruction
.
m
. i~i . .
English compulsory
, .
in
ships.
German schools
establishes fifteen Scholarships
at Oxford (five in each of the first three years
after his death) of ^250 each tenable for three
years for students of German birth to be nomi-
"
nated by the German Emperor for a good
understanding between England Germany and
the United States of America will secure the
(/)
The
following account of the discussion which took
place whenthe proportion of marks was finally settled is quoted
from the REVIEW OF REVIEWS, May, 1902, p. 480. The
discussion is reported by Mr. Stead, who was present with Mr.
Rhodes and Mr. Hawksley :
laughing, as he wrote down the points. " First, there are the
three qualities. You know I am all against letting the scholar-
ships merely to people who swot over books, who have spent
all their time over Latin and Greek. But you must allow for
that element which I call 'smug,' and which means scholar-
ship. That is to stand for four-tenths. Then there is
'
A
scholarship tenable at Oxford for three years at ^300
a year is to be awarded to the scholars at some particular
school in the Colony or State. The choice of the candidate
ultimately rests with the trustees, who, on making their choice,
must be governed by the following considerations. Taking
one thousand marks as representing the total, four hundred
should be allotted for an examination in scholarship, conducted
in the ordinary manner on the ordinary subjects. Two
hundred shall be awarded for proficiency in manly sports, for
the purpose of securing physical excellence. Two hundred
shall be awarded (and this is the most interesting clause of all)
to those who, in their intercourse with their fellows, have dis-
played most of the qualities of tact and skill which go to the
management of men, who have shown a public spirit in the
affairs of their school or their class, who are foremost in the
defence of the weak and the friendless, and who display those
moral qualities which qualify them to be regarded as capable
leaders of men. The remaining two hundred would be vested
in the headmaster.
The marks in the first category would be awarded by com-
petitive examination in the ordinary manner ; in the second
and third categories the candidate would be selected by the
vote of his fellows in the school The headmaster would of
40 THE WILL OF CECIL J. RHODES.
prepared stating that all the votes rendered at any rate for the
first five or ten should be notified to the trustees, and also the
Photograph by} H. Mills.
[E.
Mr. B. F. Hawksley.
D 2
THE SCHOLARSHIPS AT OXFORD. 43
yes, it was the best and the most distinctive character of Mr.
Rhodes's school ; that I was an outside barbarian, never
having been to a university or a public school, and therefore I
spoke with all deference but speaking as an outside barbarian,
;
aspire to fill. The world has echoed words and deeds of his
which will long reverberate in the dim corridors of time.
To those who, like myself, have to bear the poignant grief
caused by the loss of a dearly loved friend, whose confidence
and affection had stood the test even of the violent antagonism
roused by extreme difference of opinion on the subject of the
52 POLITICAL AND RELIGIOUS IDEAS.
intimately and loved him too well to care to balance his faults
against his virtues or to lay a critical finger upon the flaws in
the diamond. For with all his faults the man was great,
almost immeasurably great, when
contrasted with the pigmies
who pecked and twittered in his shade. To those who are
inclined to dwell more upon the wide-wasting ruin in which his
fatal blunder involved the country that he loved, it may be
sufficient to remark that even the catastrophe which was
long days and nights that he spent on the veldt, away from
communing with his own soul, and medi-
intellectual society,
be, to the Secretary of State for the Colonies for the time
being, and to Sidney Godolphin Alexander Shippard (who died
almost immediately after Mr. Rhodes Mr. Shippard was then
;
to eye with him about the tariff war Mr. Rhodes superseded
the will, which he had made in 1888, on a sheet of notepaper,
which left his fortune to " X.," by a formal will, in which the
whole of his real and personal estate was left to " X." and to
"
W. Stead, of the REVIEW OF REVIEWS." This will, the
fourth in order, was signed in March, 1891.
On bidding me good-bye, after having announced the
completion of this arrangement, Mr. Rhodes stated that when
he got to Africa he would write out his ideas, and send
them to me. It was in fulfilment of this promise that
he sent me
the letter dated August igth and September 3rd,.
1891. It was written by him at his own suggestion in
order that I might publish it in literary dress in his name
as an expression of his views. I carried out his instruc-
tions, and published the substance of this letter, with
very slight modifications
necessary to give it the clothing
that he desired, as a manifesto to the electors at the General
Election of 1895. Mr. Rhodes's personality, however, at that
time had not loomed sufficiently large before the mind of the
British public for the expression of his opinions to excite the
interest But when I published
and attention of the world.
the original draft after was received every-
his death it
his ideas, I think the public will prefer to have these rough,
hurried, and sometimes ungrammatical notes exactly as
Mr. Rhodes scrawled them off rather than to have them
" "
supplied with literary clothing by anyone else :
Mr. L. L. Michell.
68 POLITICAL AND RELIGIOUS IDEAS.
.<?JL<r
X
^*
^/
^fn-^c^i
'
/z^-^7 y ~ ^^<
* *
X^ * '
-
HIS WRITINGS. 73
might go on ad infinitum.
Fancy the charm to young America, just
coming on and dissatisfied for they have filled
*
Mr. Sidney Low, formerly editor of the St. James's Gazette,
writing in the Nineteenth Century for May, 1902, thus summarises
the cardinal doctrines which formed the staple of Mr. Rhodes's
"
conversation with him :
First, that insular England was quite
insufficient to maintain, or even to protect, itself without the
assistance of the Anglo-Saxon peoples beyond the seas of Europe.
Secondly, that the first and greatest aim of British statesmanship
should be to find new areas of settlement, and new markets for the
products that would, in due course, be penalised in the territories
and dependencies of all our rivals by discriminating tariffs.
Thirdly, that the largest tracts of unoccupied or undeveloped lands
remaining on the globe were in Africa, and therefore that the
most strenuous efforts should be made to keep open a great part of
that continent to British commerce and colonisation. Fourthly,
that as the key to the African position lay in the various Anglo-
Dutch States and provinces, it was imperative to convert the
whole region into a united, self-governing federation, exempt from
meddlesome interference by the home authorities, but loyal to the
Empire, and welcoming British enterprise and progress. Fifthly,
that the world was made for the service of man, and more
particularly of civilised, white, European men, who were most
capable of utilising the crude resources of Nature for the promotion
of wealth and prosperity. And, finally, that the British Constitu-
tion was an absurd anachronism, and that it should be remodelled
on the lines of the American Union, with federal self-governing
Colonies as the constituent States.
F 2
74 POLITICAL AND RELIGIOUS IDEAS.
president is
dimly seeing it, but his horizon is
limited to the New World north and south, and
so he would intrigue in Canada, Argentina, and
Brazil, to the exclusion of England. Such a brain
wants but little to see the true solution he is still
;
organisation, for it is
impossible for one human
75
Dr. Jameson.
76 POLITICAL AND RELIGIOUS IDEAS.
intimately associated with him from his college days until his
death, with this result. I found that to none of them had
but it's none the worse on that account. Almost all the best
things that we have in the world to-day began by being
dreams." It was in the Pall Mall Gazette in those days that I
conducted a continuous and passionate apostolate in favour of
a closer union with the Colonies. It is amusing to look back
at the old pages, and to find how the preservation of the trade
route from the Cape to the Zambesi was stoutly contended for
8o POLITICAL AND RELIGIOUS IDEAS.
"
I have never met a man who, upon broad Imperial
matters, was so entirely of my wayof thinking."
On my expressing my surprise that we should be in such
agreement, he laughed and said
" It have taken
is not to be wondered at, because I my
ideas from the Pall Mall Gazette"
The paper permeated South Africa, he said, and he had met
it
everywhere. He then told me what surprised me not a little,
and what will probably come to many of those who admire him
to-day with a certain shock.
He said that although he had read regularly the Pall Mall
Gazette in South Africa, it was not until the year 1885 that he
had realised that the editor of the paper, whose ideas he had
assimilated so eagerly, was a person who was capable of
defending principles regardless of considerations of his
his
own ease and safety. But when in 1885 I published " The
Maiden Tribute " and went to gaol for what I had done, he
"
felt, Here is the man
one who has not only the
I want
right principles, but more anxious
to promote them than to
is
1889 he said he would not sail until he had met me and told
me all his plans. Hence he had made Sir Charles Mills
arrange this interview in order to talk to me about them all,
and specially to discuss how he could help me to strengthen
and extend my influence as editor.
Writing to my wife immediately afcer I had left him, I
said :
HIS RELIGION.
Mr. Rhodes's conception of his duties to his fellow-men
rests upon a foundation as distinctly ethical and theistic as that
of the old Puritans. If you could imagine an emperor of old
Rome crossed with one of Cromwell's Ironsides, and the result
brought up at the feet of Ignatius Loyola, you would have an
amalgam not unlike that which men call Cecil Rhodes. The
idea of the State, the Empire, and the supreme allegiance
which it has a right to claim from all its subjects, is as fully
and, strange though it may appear to those who only know him
as the destroyer of Lobengula, his moral sense revolts against
of his thinking is making itself felt more and more every dayin
the development of Africa.
THE SEARCH FOR THE SUPREME IDEAL.
WhenMr. Rhodes was an undergraduate at Oxford, he
was profoundly impressed by a saying of Aristotle as to
HIS CONVERSATIONS. 85
found it. For him that supreme ideal was still to seek. So
he fell a-thinking. The object to which most of those who
surrounded him eagerly dedicated their lives was the pursuit
of wealth. For that they were ready to sacrifice all. Was it
Rhodes.
IN POLITICS.
recognise that my life has been work. Of course I must say frankly
that I do not happen to belong to your particular sect in religion.
We all have many ideals, but I may say that when we come abroad
we all broaden. We broaden immensely, and especially in this
spot, because we are always looking on that mountain, and there
is immense breadth in it. That gives us, while we retain our
individual dogmas, immense breadth of feeling and consideration
for all those who are striving to do good work, and perhaps
improve the condition of humanity in general. The fact . . .
ing stones into the water. But what is worth while doing ? "
Then upon him there grew more and more palpably real, at
least as a possibility, that the teachings of all the seers, of all
the religions, were based on solid fact, and that after all there
was a God who reigned over all the children of men, and who,
moreover, would exact a strict account for all the deeds which
they did in the body. He combated the notion ; but the
balance of authority was against him. All religions, in alh
times surely the universal instinct of the race had something
to justify it !
*
have been somewhat severely taken to task by Mr. Bramwell
I
Booth what he regards as my failure to do full justice to the
for
religious side of Mr. Rhodes's character. By way of making
amends, I quote the following extracts from the remarks made
by the General and by Mr. W. Bramwell Booth himself after
Mr. Rhodes's death. General Booth, writing in the War Cry of
April 5th, 1902, said :
In the course of my wanderings I have been privileged to
meet with many of the class of individuals who are said to be the
moving spirits of the world, but very few outside the pale of
Christian and philanthropic circles have impressed and interested
me more than did Cecil Rhodes.
The first time we met was on the occasion of my first visit to
South Africa. Mr. Rhodes was then Premier of Cape Colony.
That was in the year 1891. He received me at the Parliament
Buildings.
Weunderstood one another at once, and plunged into a dis-
"
cussion of my proposal for the founding of An Over-trie- Sea
Colony."
"
Our objects, you see, differ," said he. " You are set
on filling the world with the knowledge of the Gospel. My ruling
purpose is the extension of the British Empire." Then, laying his
ringer on a great piece of the map showing the country, part of
which was then known as Mashonaland, but which is now called
after his name, he went on to say,
"
If this part of South Africa
would suit you, I can give you whatever extent of land you may
require."
Years passed away. In 1895 I was once more in South Africa.
" said Mr. Rhodes,
"
the gold turns out to be a success, the
If,"
G 2
90 POLITICAL AND RELIGIOUS IDEAS.
"
puzzled the ancients. Canst thou by searching find out
"
God ? Are not His ways past finding out ? Perhaps yes ;
"
perhaps no. They did not know everything down in Judee."
Anyhow, Mr. Rhodes was much too practical and thorough-
markets will be all right for the corn and vegetables and fruit which
you and your colony will produce. And if you think the locality
will be suitable, you had better send some capable officers to survey
the country. They can select the district most likely to answer
your purposes, and you shall have what land is necessary."
This offer Mr. Rhodes made in the most deliberate manner
twice over. Of course, he knew what I wanted to do. I wanted
the country for the people, and he wanted the people for the
country. So far, we were one, perhaps not much further.
As the interview closed, something was said by me bearing on
his spiritual interests. I
forget what I said, but it was something
straight, personal, and it was understood by him at once. While
he did not assent to my remarks by any passing pretensions to
religion, he was serious and thoughtful, and when I said I should
"
pray for him, he responded, Yes, that was good." Prayer, he
considered, was useful, acting as a sort of time-table, bringing before
the mind the duties of the day, and pulling one up to face the obliga-
tions for their discharge. A little incident that occurred some years
afterwards showed that my remarks made an indelible impression
on his mind.
Our next meeting was in England. In company with Lord
Loch he wanted to see the Hadleigh Farm Colony, and an appoint-
ment was made for a visit. He specially desired that I should
accompany him, and, of course, I gladly agreed. My son (the chief
of the staff) was with us. We went down together.
After the journey down we lunched together, and wandered over
the colony and discussed its principal features. Mr. Rhodes was
interested in everything. Nothing struck me more than his inquiring
spirit.
"
What is this ? and What is it for ? and " How does it
" " "
bands, and military titles of your officers, but I do know this, that
in my own Church there are many disputes as to details (a laugh)
disputes as to the use of incense, the use of the confessional, the
lighting and non-lighting of candles, and as to the wearing of
embroidered garments (laughter) but, after all (and Mr. Rhodes
waved his hand as to emphasise his contempt for these narrow-
minded objectors), let us put these details aside. (Loud applause.)
"
What do we recognise ? We recognise this, that they are not
doing the work of the ordinary human being. Be he an officer of
this organisation, a minister ofmy Church, or a priest of the Roman
Catholic Church, they all have a higher object. They give their
whole lives for the bettering of humanity. I can simply give you
my word that, living in a remote portion of Her Majesty's dominions,
I
gladly give my testimony to the good and practical work which
you do in that part of the world that I have adopted as my home."
(Loud and continued applause.)
Mr. W. Bramwell Booth, writing in the War Cry, adds his
testimony as follows :
But it was during that day on the colony that I really got a
glimpse of the true man. He was down with us at the General's
invitation. They had met before in South Africa, and Mr. Rhodes
was evidently much taken with the General. I have heard it said
that he was a silent, taciturn man, cold, stiff, and difficult to talk
to. I saw nothing of the sort. Before we had been seated for five
minutes in the railway carriage on the outward journey, he and
the General were talking as hard as they could go about the poor
and the miserable of the world, about South Africa and the native
races, about the prospects of our work in Rhodesia it was before
this awful war and the chances of our getting help to do some-
thing for the peoples on the Zambesi. Mr. Rhodes seemed to eater
fully into the General's ideas as to the value of the people to the
country before all else, and the importance of caring for their moral
and spiritual, as well as their material well-being. After a while,
the General proposed prayer, and, kneeling down in the compart-
ment, sought God's blessing on our visitor. Mr. Rhodes bowed
his head, and closed his eyes with much reverence ; and when the
Photograph by\ \E. H. Mills.
WHAT IS HE DOING ?
ments, follow the same lines, and aim at the same mark to the
best of my ability."
he puts it ;
but in its essence, is it not the way in which
General took his seat again, held out his hand to him in the midst
of a silence, which to me seemed eloquent of thoughts too deep for
words. Later in the day I had a close talk with him about eternal
things. I have no idea what religious training or experience he
may have had in the past, but one thing was quite clear to me, he
had a lofty conception of duty, and while conscious of his great
influence, knew that it was bestowed on him in the providence of
God, to Whom he was accountable for all.
Mr. Rhodes was delighted with his day at Hadleigh, and said
so. He went everywhere, saw everything, asked innumerable
questions, interviewed officers and colonists, tasted the soup, chal-
lenged the price of the coal, offered his advice on the value of
certain fruit trees, and chaffed me unmercifully about an old
portable engine which ought, no doubt, to have been disposed of
long ago, but which our poverty had induced us to keep going. He
was much impressed by some of the colonists, and could not believe
at first that these fine brawny fellows could ever have been what,
alas we knew only too well to have been the case. The General
!
is no doubt but that it is during the period of youth that you get
those impressions which afterwards dominate your whole life. I
always be, unjust. And the third note of the ultimate towards
which our race is bending must surely be that of Peace, of the
industrial commonwealth as opposed to the military clan or
sation. But the spirit and drift of our talk the following
extract from a letter which I wrote to Mr. Rhodes three
months later may suffice to illustrate :
"
have been thinking a great deal since I first saw you
I
"
about your great idea (that of the Society, which he certainly
did not take from the Pall Mall Gazette), " and the more I
think the more it possesses me, and the more I am shut up to
the conclusion that the best way in which I can help towards
its realisation is, as
you said in a letter to me last month, by
working towards the paper. ... If, as it seems to me, your
idea and mine is in its essence the undertaking according to
our lights to rebuild the City of God and reconstitute in the
nineteenth century some modern equivalent equipped with
modern appliances of the Mediaeval Church of the ninth cen-
tury on a foundation as broad as Humanity, then some pre-
liminary inspection of the planet would seem almost indis-
pensable."
Any immediate action in this direction, however, was post-
poned until he made a success of Mashonaland. He wrote,
HIS CONVERSATIONS. 99
" If we
made a success of this, it would be doubly easy to carry
out the programme which I sketched out to you, a part of which
would be the paper."
So he wrote from Lisbon on his way out. A year later
(November 25th, 1890) he wrote :
" am on
My dear Stead, I getting all right, and you must
remember am
going on with the same ideas as we dis-
that I
seem so potent now and still more hereafter as the English-speaking man.
Already he begins to dominate the world. The Empire and the Republic
comprise within their limits almost all the territory that remains empty for
the overflow of the world. Their citizens, with all their faults, are leading
the van of civilisation, and if any great improvements are to be made in
the condition of mankind, they will necessarily be leading instruments in
the work. Hence our first starting-point will be a deep and almost awe-
struck regard for the destinies of the English-speaking man. To use
Milton's famous phrase, faith in "God's Englishmen" will be our inspiring
principle. To make the Englishman worthy of his immense vocation, and,
at the same time, to help to hold together and strengthen the political ties
which at present link English-speaking communities save one in a
all
union which banishes dread of internecine war, to promote by every
all
means a fraternal union with the American Republic, to work for the
Empire, to seek to strengthen it, to develop it, and, when necessary, to
extend it, these will be our plainest duties.
Imperialism within limits defined by common sense and the Ten
Commandments a very different thing from the blatant Jingoism which
is
some years ago made the very name of empire stink in the nostrils of all
decent people. The sobering sense of the immense responsibilities of our
Imperial position is the best prophylactic for the frenzies of Jingoism.
And in likemanner the sense of the lamentable deficiencies and imperfec-
tions of " God's Englishmen," which results from a strenuous attempt to
make them worthy of their destinies, is the best preservative against that
odious combination of cant and arrogance which made Heine declare that
the Englishman was the most odious handiwork of the Creator. To interpret
to the English-speaking race the best thought of the other peoples is one
among the many services which we would seek to render to the Empire.
We believe inGod, in England, and in Humanity. The English-
speaking race one of the chief of God's chosen agents for executing
is
coming improvements in the lot of mankind. If all those who see that
could be brought into hearty union to help all that tends to make that
race more fit to fulfil its providential mission, and to combat all that
hinders or impairs that work, such an association or secular order would
HIS CONVERSATIONS. 101
constitutea nucleus or rallying point for all that is most vital in the
English world, the ultimate influence of which it would be difficult to
overrate.
This the highest of all the functions to which we aspire.
is Our
supreme duty is the winnowing out by a process of natural selection, and
enlisting for hearty service for the commonweal all those who possess
within their hearts the sacred fire of patriotic devotion to their country.
Who is among the people who has truth in him, who is no self-
there
seeker, who no coward, and who is capable of honest, painstaking effort
is
to help- his^auntry ? For such men we would search as for hid treasures.
They are the salt of the earth and the light of the world, and it is the duty
and the privilege of the wise man to see that they are like cities set on the
hill which cannot be hid.
The great word which has now to be spoken in the ears of the world is
that the time has come when men and women must work for the salvation
of the State with as much zeal and self-sacrifice as they now work for the
salvation of the individual. To save the country from the grasp of demons
innumerable, to prevent this Empire or this Republic becoming an incarnate
demon of lawless ambition and cruel love of gold, how many men or
women are willing to spend even one hour a month or a year? The
religious side of politics has not yet entered the minds of men.
What is wanted is a revival of civic faith, a quickening of spiritual
life in the political sphere, the inspiring of men and women with the
do common service for a common end that, indeed, is an object for which
it is worth while to make some sacrifice. Such a publication so supported
would be at once an education and an inspiration and who can say,
;
explain them to him, but I could see from the look on his face
that it made no impression, that the ideas did not enter his
gone then."
The
will then drawn up was revoked in 1893.
In 1892 Mr. Rhodes was back in London, and again the
question of the disposition of his fortune came up, and he
determined to make a fifth will. Before he gave his final
me the question whether there
instructions he discussed with
should not be a third party added, so that we should be
three. We discussed one or two names, and he afterwards
told me that he had added Mr. Hawksley as a third party.
His reasons for doing this were that he liked Mr. Hawksley,
and had explained, expounded, and discussed his views with
him, and found him sympathetic. He went on to say :
"
I think it is best that it should be left so. You know my
ideas,and will carry them out. But there will be a great deal
" X." will
of financial administration that look after. Many
legal questions will be involved, and these you can safely
leave in the hands of Mr. Hawksley."
And so it was that when the fifth will, drafted in 1892, was
"
signed by Mr. Rhodes in 1893, X.," Mr. Hawksley and myself
were left sole executors and joint-heirs of Mr. Rhodes's fortune,
with the understanding that I was the custodian of the
Rhodesian ideas, that I was to decide as to the method in
which the money was to be used according to these ideas,
subject to the advice of "X." on financial matters, and of
Mr. Hawksley on matters of law.
In 1894 Mr. Rhodes came to England and again discussed
with me working of the scheme, reported to me his
the
plans. You tell me all your schemes, and when we get the
northern country settled we shall be able to carry them out.
It is necessary," he added, " that I should tell you ail my ideas,
in order that you may know what to do if I
But," should go.
he went on, " I am of vigour and life, and I don't
still full
the final form in which it was given in his will of 1899 and its
codicil of 1900. He told me that when he was on the Red
Sea in 1893 a thought suddenly struck him that it would be a
good thing to create a number of scholarships tenable at a
residential English University, that should be open to the
various British Colonies. He proposed to found twelve
scholarships every year, each tenable for three years, of the
value of ^250 a year, to be held at Oxford. He said he
had added a codicil to his will making provision for these
scholarships, which would entail an annual charge upon his
estate of about ^10,000 a year. He explained that there
would be three for French Canadians and three for British.
Each of the Australasian Colonies, including Western Australia
and Tasmania, was to have three that is to say, one each
year but the Cape, because it was his own Colony, was to
;
it
ought to have been enough for me that he desired it. My
opposition was unfortunately unavailing.
In the two disastrous years which followed the Raid,
although I saw Mr. Rhodes frequently, we talked little or
nothing about his favourite Society. More pressing questions
preoccupied our attention. I regretted that Mr. Rhodes was
Through all that trying time I can honestly say that I did
my level best to help my friend out of the scrape in which he
had placed himself without involving the nation at the same
time in the disaster which subsequently overtook it. My
endeavour to induce all parties to tell the truth and to
shoulder the modicum of blame attaching to each for his
share of the conspiracy failed. Mr. Rhodes was offered up-
as a scapegoat. But although differing so widely on the vital
question with which was bound up the future of South Africa,
my relations with Mr. Rhodes remained as affectionate and
intimate as ever. The last time I saw him before the war
broke out we had a long talk, which failed to bring us to
agreement. Mr. Rhodes said that he had tried his hand at
Transvaal business, but he had made such a mess
settling the
of that he absolutely refused to take any initiative in the
it
"
You will support Milner in any measure that he may take
short of war. I make no such limitation. I support Milner
io8 POLITICAL AND RELIGIOUS IDEAS.
Mr. F. E. Garrett.
HIS CONVERSATIONS, in
have changed. But after all that does not matter now. The
war is ending, and that is a past issue."
Mr. Rhodes went back to Africa and I did not see him
again till his return last year. In January, 1901, he had
added a codicil to his will, removing my name from the list of
executors, fearing that the others might find it difficult to work
with me. He wrote me at the same time saying I was " too
"
masterful to work with the other executors.*
*
On this subject Mr. B. F. Hawksley, solicitor to Mr. Rhodes,
"
writes : It is quite true that Mr. Rhodes associated my friend
Mr. W. T. Stead wfth those upon whom he has imposed the task
of carrying out his aspirations. In the far back days when Mr.
Stead expounded in the Pall Mall Gazette the common interests
of the English-speaking peoples his acquaintance was sought by
Mr. Rhodes an acquaintanceship which ripened into a close
intimacy and continued to the last. Mr. Rhodes recognised in
ii2 POLITICAL AND RELIGIOUS IDEAS.
help which I was able to give to Mr. Rhodes, and I regret that
in the one great blunder which marred his career my opposi-
tion failed to turn him from his purpose. Both in what I
aided him to do and in what I attempted to prevent his doing,
I was faithful to the great ideal for the realisation of which we
And yet men marvel that I loved him and love him still.
That Mr. Rhodes is no more with us may seem to some a
conclusive reason why all hope should be abandoned of realis-
ing his great idea. To me it seems that the death of the
Founder in the midst of his unaccomplished labours is a trumpet
Mr. Stead one who thought as he did, and who had a marvellous
giftenabling him to clothe with a literary charm ideas they both
held dear even as the diamond-cutter will by his work expose the
brilliancy of the rough diamond. As Mr. Rhodes frequently said
to me and to others, including Mr. Stead himself, the friendship of
the two men was too strong to be broken by passing differences on
the South African war. The removal of Mr. Stead's name from
Mr. Rhodes's testament arose from other causes quite appreciated
by Mr. Stead, and which did honour alike to both men. More it is
unnecessary for me to say, except that I shall be grateful if this
plain statement can receive the widest publicity."
HIS CONVERSATIONS. 113
" It was in
my mind," said the old Hebrew monarch as he
came to die, " to build an house unto the name of the Lord
my God. But the word of the Lord came to me, saying,
Thou hast shed blood abundantly,and hast made great wars ;
HIS CONVERSATIONS. 115
idea of the first Gladstonian Home Rule Bill, and his loyal
acceptance of the principle of federalism. By this arrangement
Mr. Parnell, instead of accepting the exclusion of Irish members
from Westminster and the conversion of Ireland into a taxed
republic, which would be furnished in advance with an excuse
"
for revolt by the familiar maxim taxation without representa-
T2o POLITICAL A^ D RELIGIOUS IDEAS.
7
tion is
tyranny." undertook to accept a Home basedRule Bill
House of Commons,
June 23, '88.
Empire.
Mr. Rhodes's second contribution to British political funds
took place three years after the subscription to Mr. Parnell.
The correspondence which took place in 1891 did not appear
till1901, when it was extracted from Mr. Rhodes by the extra-
ordinary blunder of the editor of the Spectator, who, hearing
from a correspondent signing himself " C. B." that Mr. Rhodes
had given Mr. Schnadhorst a contribution to the funds of the
Liberal Party, on condition that its leaders should not urge or
support our retrogression from Egypt, jumped to the remark-
able conclusion that this fact explained the greatest of all
[A.]
Monday, February 23, 1891.
My dear Schnadhorst, I enclose you a
cheque for , 5,000, and I
hope you will, with
the extreme caution that is necessary, help in
guiding your party to consider politics other than
England.
I do not think your visit to Kimberley did
you harm, either physically or politically, and I
.am glad to send you the contribution I promised.
The future of England must be Liberal, perhaps,
to fight Socialism. I make but two conditions ;
The postscript explains how it was that this letter came into
[C]
National Liberal Federation,
42, Parliament Street, S.W.
June 4th, 1892.
My dear Rhodes, I regret very much I did not see you
when you were here, as your letter places me in a position of
extreme perplexity. Your donation was given with two con-
both of which will be observed, but in a postscript you
ditions,
referred to John Morley's speech on Egypt in the sense in
which you have written about Mr. Gladstone's reference to the
same subject. It is eighteen months ago since I saw you,
when you referred to the subject in conversation, and I told
you then, as I think now, that J. M.'s speech was very unwise,
and that it did not represent the policy of the party. The
General Election has been coming near, and is now close
at hand. Your gift was intended to help in the Home Rule
struggle. It could do so only by being used before the
will not make any further promises until I hear from you.
archangels ;
but he was a grey archangel, with a crippled wing,
which caused him to pursue a somewhat devious course in the
midst of the storm-winds of race-passion and political intrigue.
A grey archangel crossed with a Jesuit, who was so devoted
to his ends that almost all means were to him indifferent,
*4LJ. ta
A Characteristic Portrait.
142 POLITICAL AND RELIGIOUS IDEAS.
"
I have my own views as to the future of
South Africa, and I believe in an United States
HIS SPEECHES. 143
"
I that I am not prepared to
know myself
forfeit at any time my own flag. I repeat I am
not prepared at any time to forfeit my own flag.
If I forfeit my flag what have I left ? If you take
Therein Mr. Rhodes laid his finger upon the great secret of
his success that which differentiated him from the ruck of the
"
only got to read history to know
You have
that ever there was a proud, rude man, it was
if
"
I all would recognise that I am an
think
Englishman, and one of my strongest feelings is
loyalty to my own country. If the report of such
a condition in the settlement by Sir Charles
Warren is correct, that no man of Dutch descent
is to have a farm, it would be better for the
I remember, when a
English colonists to retire.
strongly would he have felt it just across the Vaal and the
Orange River !
"
Well, I have made up my mind that there
must be class legislation, that there must be Pass
HIS SPEECHES. 149
Charters,'
when in difficulty, always appeal to the mother
country. Our reply must be that the boot is on
the other leg. For four years we have found the
cost of administration of one of your own provinces,
and we are proud to think that we have yearly
paid into Her Majesty's Treasury a sum for the
administration of one of our own provinces,
because Governments were unable to face the
House of Commons to ask them to contribute to
their obligations.
"
Well, that isposition north of the
the
Zambesi ;
and I
may reference to that
say, in
part of our territory, that there are very promising
reports from it. It is a high plateau, fully
mineralised, and every report shows that the high
plateau is a part where Europeans can live. If
we pass from that to the South, we first come to
Matabeleland and Mashonaland. There we have
had great difficulties in the past. We had a
Charter, but not a country. We had first to go
152 POLITICAL AND RELIGIOUS IDEAS.
plateau, however, is
perfectly healthy. You may
therefore say that you have a country where
white people can live and be born and brought
up, and it is suitable for agriculture but of ;
say,
a capital of ,2,000,000 we are dealing with a
;
'
And where do I come in ?
'
(Laughter.) You
must show them that there is a distinct advantage
to them in these developments abroad. That is
the reason why, when we made a constitution for
this country, I submitted a provision that the
duty on British goods should not exceed the
166 POLITICAL AND RELIGIOUS IDEAS.
I think it will do
you and your trade more good
than anything I can conceive. Gentlemen, in all
it is the little
things questions that change the
world. This charter came from an accidental
thought, and all the great changes of the world
come from little accidents. All the combinations
and beautiful essays that are put forward so
eagerly are unpractical enough, but this consti-
tution is a more practical thing. I can assure
you there is a
very practical thing in it. We
have been accused of being a speculative set of
company-mongers, and nobody could see any
great chance of our ultimate financial success ;
number as my shareholders."
It was
to these unimaginative persons, especially to the
"
Finally, I would submit to
this thought,
you
that when we look back upon
the troubles we
have gone through, and especially all that has
been suffered by the women and children, we
have this satisfaction that we have done our
best to preserve that which is the best com-
mercial asset in the world the protection of Her
Majesty's flag."
When Mr. Rhodes came back from Kimberley, I had a
talk with him upon this subject. He said that it was very
ridiculous the way people had abused him for the passage
about the flag. If they had considered the circumstances in
which the speech was made, they would have seen the reason
for it.
HfS SPEECHES. 175
"
People talked as if I were making a political
speech, or speaking as a politician. I was not.
1 was addressing a meeting of the De Beers
shareholders, half of whom were Frenchmen.
Of course, the number of people present at the
meeting was small, but 1 was addressing the
French shareholders through the press. French
feeling is very strong against England, and
the French shareholders might naturally feel
aggrieved. They had lost an enormous sum of
money from the cessation of industry during the
war. The part which the De Beers Company
had taken in defending Kimberley was another
point upon which, as shareholders, they might
fairly take an exception. In order to parry their
objection and to show to them that, after all, I
was really looking after their business, I finished
up with a declaration that I had been spending
their money in defending what was, after all, the
greatest commercial asset in the world, the pro-
tection of the British flag. It was a perfectly
true thing, and it seemed to me a very useful
thing to say in the circumstances. I was
addressing, not the world at large, but De Beers
I had
shareholders. my French shareholders in
my eye all the time."
1
76
PART III.
"
Good heavens ! Out with it, man What
"
has happened ?
i8o THE CLOSING SCENE.
" "
Well," said Lord Grey, I am
sorry to tell you
that Groote Schuur was burnt down last night."
The tense look of anguish disappeared from
Rhodes's face. He heaved a great sigh, and
exclaimed with inexpressible relief
"
Oh, thank God, thank God I
thought
!
"
Do the comparative. Always do the com-
parative."
By he meant, whenever you are over-
this
taken by a misfortune or plunged into dire
tribulation, you can find consolation by reflecting
how much worse things might have been, or how
much greater had been the misery suffered by
others. I well remember Mr. Rhodes
telling me
how he had frequently supported himself in the
midst of the most trying crisis of his career,
when everything seemed to be lost. He used
to say
"
When I was inclined to take too tragic a
view of the consequences of apparently imminent
disaster, I used to reflect what the old Roman
Emperors must have felt when (as often
happened) their legions were scattered, and
they fled from a stricken field, knowing that
they had lost the empire of the world. To
THE CLOSING SCENE. 181
whom he has engaged " But the five acts are not complete ;
INDEX.
Africa, East, Company based on suppression of slave trade and cultivation of cocoa-
nut, 172
Africa
Oxford, 31, 35
Aristotle, influence of, on C. J. Rhodes, 84, 98
Athletics insisted on by C. J. Rhodes, 36
Australia, South, scholarships for, 32 Western, scholarships for, 32
;
124-5
policy in the Times, 1885, 138 proposal to exclude Dutch from, condemned, 147
; ;
Cape Colony, C. J. Rhodes's desire to secure Bechuanaland for, 80, 138 devotion to its ;
130
Charter, the British South African, not thought of when subscription given to C. S.
Parnell. 120
Chartered Company : Address to shareholders. 1895, 149-173 ; financial position in 1895,
153-162: the justification and necessity for, 171
Christ Church, Oxford, Bursar of, on ^300 scholarships, 30
Codicils to will of C. J. Rhodes, Dalham Hall, 45 German scholarships, 35 Lord ; ;
'
Colonies, direct representation in Parliament advocated by C. J. Rhodes, 117, 124-5
suggested financial basis of representation, 125 accepted by Mr. Parnell, 126. ;
See Federation
Colonies, scholarships for, 23 list of Colonies included, 32
: list cf Colonies omitted, 33 : -,
" the
Country landlords strength of England," 46
Crown Colony objected to by C. J. Rhodes, 144-9
Customs union of South Africa anticipated by C. J. Rhodes, 168
194 INDEX.
Dalham Hall Estate, left to Colonel and Captain Rhodes, 45
Palston, Rhodes family property in, 117
Darwin, influence of, on C. J. Rhodes, 88, 95
De Beers Company, address to shareholders of, in 1900, 173-4 resources of, used to :
Dutch goodwill essential to British Empire in South Africa, in, 113 must not be ;
Empire of, 122, 144-8; native policy of, approved by C. J. Rhodes, 148; C. J.
Rhodes hardly knew how to choose between Dutch and British, 145. See
Afrikander Bond
evacuation," 132 endangered by Mr. Gladstone and Mr. Morley, 132, 133-4
; :
ance of, 61, 62 disintegration hated, 135 its meaning to C. J. Rhodes, 140, 143
; ;
people, 124 a very practical people, like expansion for practical business, 150,
;
*'
English-speaking Men, To all," Manifesto in REVIEW OF REVIEWS, 95-102
English-speaking peoples, union of, C. J. Rhodes on, 27, 59, 61, 66, 73, 76
Executors of last will, 49
Exeter Hall, C. J. Rhodes's first and last visit to, 82 opposed to its native policy, 148 ;
Expansion, effect of, on number of English in the world, 58 British industry, 165 ; ;
Federation indispensable, 61, 73. 74, 118 C. J. Rhodes's devotion to, 118 C. J. Rhodes's ; :
ideas on, 124 Mr. Parnell's assent to, 126 in South Africa, 143
; ;
"
Financial patent" of C. J. Rhodes in Rhodesia, 50 per cent, on gold, 161
Flag, devotion of C. J. Rhodes to, 145 but would accept Stars and Stripes, 62, 102 ; ;
<jarrett, F. E., describes Groote Schuur, ; portrait of, no; his authority n invoked by
C. J. Rhodes, 109
Germany, fifteen scholarships for, 35 approved by Kaiser, 36 ;
Gladstone, Mr., his Home Rule Bill disliked by C. J. Rhodes, 121, 131-2 objects to ;
retention of Irish members, 118 concedes their retention, 129 but insists on
; :
dining-room, 14; the drawing-room, 15; fund for maintenance of, 17; the hall,
18 the library, 18
; the billiard-room, 19 ; the panelled room, 19 marble bath- ; ;
Ireland: C. J. Rhodes subscribes to national fund, 118-130; to convert Home Rule Bill
into Federalism, 120 Cape experience as a guide, 122
;
INDEX. 195
in 1886, 117; subscribes to Home Rule, 120-130; to Liberal Election Fund, 130-9;
"
My ideas Liberalism plus Empire," 131 ruining itself by Little Englandism, 131 ; ;
gentlemen, 46
Napoleon and his dirty linen, 74 C. J. Rhodes on his dream of Universal Monarchy,
;
74
Natal, three scholarships for, 32
Native policy of C. J. Rhodes in Africa: " must be lords over them," 149 We
Newfoundland, three scholarships for, 32
New South Wales, three scholarships for, 32
New Zealand, three scholarships for, 32
Nyassaland, cost of administration borne by Chartered Company for four years, 151
20 other Oriel men, 21, 30 income of, 20 bequests to, 20-21 and St. Mary Hall,
; ; ; ;
Oxford, scholarships to bs tenable at, 23, 108 ; why, 23-24 ; Medical School, 27
Parnell, C. S., correspondence between, and C. J. Rhodes, 120-130; subscription to, 125
;
at Hague,
Peace, C. J. Rhodes's idea of how it might be attained, 59, 61, 66 ; Conference
108-109
Persia, part of Anglo-Saxon sphere, 74
Pickering, N. E., heir to C. J. Rhodes in second will, 62
Portugal to come under Anglo-Saxon control, 74
Portuguese, C. J. Rhodes speaks well of, 163
196 INDEX.
Preferential tariff strongly advocated by C. J. Rhodes, 63, 66
Protection, hard fight, 66; C. J. Rhodes's speech against, 166-171; why Colonies
approve, 168 his safeguard against, 167
;
Anecdotes of: Places Zimbabye stone hawk in Council Chamber, 16 tried to visit ;
General Gordon, 142 on hearing of the burning of Groote Schuur, 180 Lord
; ;
Roman Emperor plus Ironside plus Loyola, 83; Grey Archangel," 139; by "A
the Booths, 89-93, J 77 Sir C. Warren, 117
'
scanaai, 105-7.
Conversations with Iwan Mi'iller, 23, 46 Sidney Low, 73 W. T. Stead, 79-115, 190;
; ;
Death of, at Muizenberg, March 26, 1902, 177 ; how precipitated, 187 his last word, 190
;
Personal history of: 1881, M.A., Oxford, 20; draws up draft of ideas, 1877, 58 ; first
taleson object of life, 58, 85 dreams of entering Parliament, 117 visits Salvation
; ;
Milner, 108 as youngster learns that truth and no race distinctions axioms of
;
Empire, 147
Political ideas of: his ideal, 56 first draft of, 1877, 58 English first of races, 58 its
; : ;
134 ; what Empire meant to him, 140 ; his own definition, 143 ; on the flag, 143 ; hi
dependent on outside markets, 68 to end all war and make one language uni-
;
versal, gradually absorb all wealth and higher minds to object, 68 ; Anglo-Ameri-
can reunion, 73 ; Federal Parliament, sitting five years Washington, five years
;raits of:
" Downey s, 3 by Tennyson Cole, 26 ; by Marchioness of Granby, 50 ; in
;
Darwinian, 88; on life and death, 88; is there a God? 88 what does He want ;
me to do? 89; testimony of the Booths, 89-93; Divine area of action, 94; Divine
method, 94 Divine instrument, 95
; Divine ideal, 96 his threefold test, 97 ; ; ;
of theological discussion, 184; and Marcus Aurelius, 184 "This one thing I do," :
184 his colloquy with the Infinite, 188-9 not an atheist, 189 on the future life, 189
; : ;
" Homes that is what I work on university educa-
Sayings of: on Matoppos,
" " "
for," 5 ;
new countries you are trying to make new men," 93 Justice, Liberty, Peace, the ;
" You cannot
highest things, 97 govern South Africa by trampling on" the
;
Dutch," 113 Gladstonian Home Rule makes Ireland a taxed republic, 118
; ; My
idea Liberalism fius Empire," 131 " No use to have
big ideas without ;
" The whole of " Your trade is
cash," 142 ; your politics lie in your trade," 169 ;
the world and your life is the world," 170 East Africa based on the suppression of ;
slave trade and cultivation of cocoanut, 172 ".The best commercial asset in the ;
world," 174-5: "Always do the comparative!" 181 : "So much to do, so little
" I would
done," 184 ; annex the planets if I could," 190
Speeches of: at laying foundation stone Presbyterian Chapel. 86 at Salvation Army ;
lished by Chapman and Hall, 1900, 139 on United States of South Africa, 1883, ;
142 on the Flag question, 1890, 143, 173 on the Afrikander Bond, 1891, 144
; ; ;
on the Dutch, 145, 147 against race distinctions, 147 against Crown Colony, 148
; ; ;
on native legislation, 1888, 148 address to the shareholders of the Chartered Com- ;
Wills first of Cecil J. Rhodes's, 1877, 61 second, 1882, 62 third, 1888, 62 fourth,
:
; : ;
1891, 64 fifth, 1893, 104 sixth and last, 1899, 3 why altered, 103-4
; ; ;
Will, last, and Testament of: domicile declared in Rhodesia, 3 burial place in the ;
4 conditions for future burials, 5 fund for beautifying burial place, 7 bequeaths
; ; ;
Bulawayo and Inyanga estates for instruction of people, 5 forms Matoppos and ;
Bulawayo fund for burial place, 7 provides for planting Sauerdale (q.v. Park, 7 ; ;
for completing Westacre .q.v. dam, 7-9 for constructing railway to Westacre for ;
.q.v.} as residence for Prime Minister of federated South Africa, 13 till then as ;
park for people, 16 founds Groote Schuur fund, 17 bequeaths ^100,000 to Oriel
; ;
23 suggests extension of medical school, 24; states his object as union of English-
;
Volunteers, 47; forfeiture of title, 47 leaves residue (q.v.) of estate to joint tenants ;
the Zambesi, 150; Matabele and Mashonaland, 151; extent of, 152; material
development of, 154, 157 cost of administering in 1895, 154-5 railway making
; :
to, 157 a white man's country, 158 ; profits of, from minerals, 159
;
Hays ;
reduction of Irish Members, 121 saves Egypt by joining Gladstone's Ministry, 132 ; ;
Africa, 131 asks for subscription to Liberal fund, 131 ; .5,000 given on conditions,
;
Scholarships, first founded by C. J. Rhodes, for Rondebosch College, 29 in his last will, ;
60 were founded for Colonies, 30-1 100 for United States, 34 15'for Germany, 35 ; ; ;
the wealth of the world, 73 success anticipated in 200 years, 76 his idea in
; ;
meets C. J. Rhodes ,1889 79: through Sir C. Mills, 81 first impressions, 81-2
, ; ;
Rhodes published in 1899, 83-98 letter of, to C. J. Rhodes, 98 letters to, from : :
C. J. Rhodes, 64, 99: founds the REVIEW OF REVIEWS, 99 Manifesto "To all ;
"
English-speaking Peoples," 93-102 approved by C. J. Rhodes, 99 Our Ideas,"
; ;
with
" and B. X" with C. J.
joint heir in fifth will F. Hawksley, 104; discusses
Rhodes methods of propaganda, 104 told about the scholarships, 105 action ; :
in re Jameson Raid, 107; last interview with C. J. Rhodes before the war, 107;
made joint heir in last will, 108 suggests American scholarships, 108 other ; ;
suggestions rejected, 103 his responsibility from 1891-9, 103 first interview with
: :
C. J. Rhodes after war broke out, 103: "insubordination" of, 109; his defence,
in B. F. Hawksley on, in friendship unimpaired, 112; last interviews with
: ;
, ;
cial war with, 66, 76 fascinated with idea of world-wide dominion, 74; McKinley
;
future tariff war with, 167; tariff cripples English trade, 169
University education, why esteemed by C. J. Rhodes, 23 must be residential, 24 ;
of the world's, 76 " Don't despise money," 83 acquisition of, not good enough,
; ;
85 his subscription to Mr. Parnell, 120-130 secures conversion of Home Rule from
; ;
separation to federation, 120 not due to anxiety for Charter, 120; subscription to
;
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