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Friends Until the End: Edmund Burke and Charles Fox in the Age of Revolution

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A lively dual biography of the two great English orators of the eighteenth century, who cultivated a friendship across their political differences

Edmund Burke and Charles Fox made common political cause in eighteenth-century Britain for twenty-five years: they supported the rebellious American colonies, attacked the British slave trade, defended religious liberty and attempted to shield Britain’s credit from the crisis-prone East India Company. The two men were an improbable pair. But the hard-drinking, mistress-collecting Fox loved and admired Burke, feelings that the clean-living political philosopher and statesman warmly reciprocated. They moved together in the London intellectual world, opposing what they regarded as the overreaching crown. Friends Until the End traces Burke and Fox’s relationship through three events: the American Revolution; the impeachment of the East India Company’s governor-general; and the French Revolution, which ended their political union and shattered their friendship.

With panache, James Grant illuminates the politics and economics of their era and its lessons for our divided present.

James Grant’s Bagehot was praised as:

  • “[…] in Grant’s hands, Bagehot’s life and career provide a superb prism through which to observe the extraordinary revolution in the British economy during the 19th century."—Simon Nixon, The Times
  • "[An] engaging new biography of Bagehot... In this very enjoyable book, Grant demonstrates that he has the measure of a fascinating—and great—Victorian."—Financial Times
Author: Grant James
Publisher: NORTON
Pages: 496
ISBN: 9780393542103
Cover: Hardback
Edition Number: 1
Release Year: 2025

James Grant founded Grant’s Interest Rate Observer, a financial markets journal, and authored Bagehot and The Forgotten Depression, which won the Hayek Prize. His writing has appeared in the Financial Times and The Wall Street Journal. He lives in Brooklyn, New York.

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