- Authors
- Kenneth Mackenzie
- Publication Date:
- January 1950
- Price
- 1/6
- Country
- United Kingdom
- Format
- A Format
- Pages
- 208pp
- Printer
- The Whitefriars Press Ltd
Printing History
Specially written for Pelican Books and first published 1950
I doubt that the most important thing was Dunkirk or the Battle of Britain, El Alamein or Stalingrad. Not even the landings in Normandy or the great blows struck by British and American bombers. Historians may decide that any one of these events was decisive, but I am persuaded that the most important thing that happened in Britain was that this nation chose to win or lose this war under the established rules of parliamentary procedure. It feared Nazism, but did not choose to imitate it. The government was given dictatorial power, but it was used with restraint, and the House of Commons was ever vigilant. Do you remember that while London was being bombed in the daylight, the House devoted two days to dis- cussing conditions under which enemy aliens were detained on the Isle of Man? Though Britain fell, there were to be no concentration camps here. EDWARD R. MURROW Broadcast, February, 1946
Made and printed in Great Britain for Penguin Books Ltd by The Whitefriars Press Ltd
