Hayek, F. A. (1944). The Road to Serfdom (1st ed.). London: George Routledge & Sons Limited. pp. 136, 160: "Compared with most other peoples only twenty years ago almost all Englishmen were liberals - however much they may have differed from party liberalism. And even to-day the English conservative or socialist, no less than the liberal, if he travels abroad, though he may find the ideas and writings of Carlyle or Disraeli, of the Webbs or H. G. Wells, exceedingly popular in circles with which he has little in common, among Nazis and other totalitarians, if he finds an intellectual island where the tradition of Macaulay and Gladstone, of J.S. Mill or John Morley lives, will find spirits who "talk the same language" as himself - however much he himself may differ from the ideals for which these men specifically stood.".
Andrews, Allen Robert Ernest (June 1968). The Forward Party: The Pall Gazette 1865–1889 (M.A. Thesis). Vancouver: University of British Columbia. pp. v, 26–44, 45–66. Retrieved 8 February 2022.