Page:Last Will and Testament of Cecil Rhodes.djvu/152

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138
POLITICAL AND RELIGIOUS IDEAS.

may be as objectionable as some critics maintain, but it does not lie in the mouths of those who remorselessly used the advantages of superior wealth in order to penalise the adoption of a policy of justice to Ireland, to throw stones at Mr. Rhodes.

Mr. Rhodes in 1885 wrote a letter of such phenomenal length that it filled a whole sheet of the Times, but as it related chiefly to the controversy as to the best way of administering Bechuanaland, and was the product of the combined wits of Mr. Maguire and himself, it is not necessary to quote it here.


A Portrait of Mr. Rhodes taken in the Matoppos, 1899.