| Gladstone rival |
| Victoria's P.M. |
| British PM, d. 1881 |
| Former British P.M. |
| Earl of Beaconsfield |
| P.M. before Gladstone |
| Two-time British P.M. |
| Gladstone's predecessor |
| Speaker of the quotation |
| Arliss's 1929 Oscar film |
| 1st Earl of Beaconsfield |
| Victorian prime minister |
| British statesman Benjamin |
| English statesman-novelist |
| First Earl of Beaconsfield |
| Gladstone's political rival |
| Former British P.M. Benjamin |
| Victorian-era Prime Minister |
| Dizzy" English Prime Minister |
| British P.M. before Gladstone |
| Author of the quotation below |
| Surname of author of quotation |
| British Prime Minister Benjamin |
| Prime minister before Gladstone |
| Two-time prime minister Benjamin |
| Powerful friend of Queen Victoria |
| 19th-century British prime minister |
| Former British prime minister Benjamin |
| Gladstone rival in 19th-century England |
| I lead, sir (anag) — British PM, d. 1881 |
| Only British prime minister of Jewish birth |
| Prime minister during Queen Victoria's reign |
| Two-time prime minister under Queen Victoria |
| British P.M. who said "justice is truth in action |
| British prime minister before and after Gladstone |
| British Prime Minister during U.S. Grant's presidency |
| Who said "Action may not always bring happiness, but there is no happiness without action. |
| Statesman Benjamin who said: "There are three kinds of lies: lies, damned lies, and statistics |