READING ROOM
They Said It
Lady Thatcher Pays Tribute
to President Reagan
Below is the complete text
of Baroness Thatcher's remarkable eulogy to Ronald
Reagan delivered at his state funeral in Washington
today....
We have lost a great president, a great American,
and a great man. And I have lost a dear friend.
In his lifetime Ronald Reagan
was such a cheerful and invigorating presence
that it was easy to forget what daunting historic
tasks he set himself.
He sought to mend America's
wounded spirit, to restore the strength of the
free world, and to free the slaves of communism.
These were causes hard to accomplish
and heavy with risk.
Yet they were pursued with
almost a lightness of spirit. For Ronald Reagan
also embodied another great cause - what Arnold
Bennett once called 'the great cause of cheering
us all up'.
His politics had a freshness
and optimism that won converts from every class
and every nation - and ultimately from the very
heart of the evil empire.
Yet his humor often had a purpose
beyond humor. In the terrible hours after the
attempt on his life, his easy jokes gave reassurance
to an anxious world.
They were evidence that in
the aftermath of terror and in the midst of hysteria,
one great heart at least remained sane and jocular.
They were truly grace under pressure.
And perhaps they signified
grace of a deeper kind. Ronnie himself certainly
believed that he had been given back his life
for a purpose. As he told a priest after his recovery
'Whatever time I've got left now belongs to the
Big Fella Upstairs'.
And surely it is hard to deny
that Ronald Reagan's life was providential, when
we look at what he achieved in the eight years
that followed.
Others prophesied the decline
of the West; he inspired America and its allies
with renewed faith in their mission of freedom.
Others saw only limits to growth;
he transformed a stagnant economy into an engine
of opportunity.
Others hoped, at best, for
an uneasy cohabitation with the Soviet Union;
he won the Cold War - not only without firing
a shot, but also by inviting enemies out of their
fortress and turning them into friends.
I cannot imagine how any diplomat,
or any dramatist, could improve on his words to
Mikhail Gorbachev at the Geneva summit: 'Let me
tell you why it is we distrust you.'
Those words are candid and
tough and they cannot have been easy to hear.
But they are also a clear invitation to a new
beginning and a new relationship that would be
rooted in trust.
We live today in the world
that Ronald Reagan began to reshape with those
words. It is a very different world with different
challenges and new dangers.
All in all, however, it is
one of greater freedom and prosperity, one more
hopeful than the world he inherited on becoming
president.
As Prime Minister, I worked
closely with Ronald Reagan for eight of the most
important years of all our lives. We talked regularly
both before and after his presidency. And I have
had time and cause to reflect on what made him
a great president.
Ronald Reagan knew his own
mind. He had firm principles - and, I believe,
right ones. He expounded them clearly, he acted
upon them decisively.
When the world threw problems
at the White House, he was not baffled, or disorientated,
or overwhelmed. He knew almost instinctively what
to do.
When his aides were preparing
option papers for his decision, they were able
to cut out entire rafts of proposals that they
knew 'the Old Man' would never wear.
When his allies came under
Soviet or domestic pressure, they could look confidently
to Washington for firm leadership.
And when his enemies tested
American resolve, they soon discovered that his
resolve was firm and unyielding.
Yet his ideas, though clear,
were never simplistic. He saw the many sides of
truth.
Yes, he warned that the Soviet
Union had an insatiable drive for military power
and territorial expansion; but he also sensed
it was being eaten away by systemic failures impossible
to reform.
Yes, he did not shrink from
denouncing Moscow's 'evil empire'. But he realized
that a man of goodwill might nonetheless emerge
from within its dark corridors.
So the President resisted Soviet
expansion and pressed down on Soviet weakness
at every point until the day came when communism
began to collapse beneath the combined weight
of these pressures and its own failures.
And when a man of goodwill
did emerge from the ruins, President Reagan stepped
forward to shake his hand and to offer sincere
co-operation.
Nothing was more typical of
Ronald Reagan than that large-hearted magnanimity
- and nothing was more American.
Therein lies perhaps the final
explanation of his achievements. Ronald Reagan
carried the American people with him in his great
endeavors because there was perfect sympathy between
them. He and they loved America and what it stands
for - freedom and opportunity for ordinary people.
As an actor in Hollywood's
golden age, he helped to make the American dream
live for millions all over the globe. His own
life was a fulfillment of that dream. He never
succumbed to the embarrassment some people feel
about an honest expression of love of country.
He was able to say 'God Bless
America' with equal fervor in public and in private.
And so he was able to call confidently upon his
fellow-countrymen to make sacrifices for America
- and to make sacrifices for those who looked
to America for hope and rescue.
With the lever of American
patriotism, he lifted up the world. And so today
the world - in Prague, in Budapest, in Warsaw,
in Sofia, in Bucharest, in Kiev and in Moscow
itself - the world mourns the passing of the Great
Liberator and echoes his prayer "God Bless
America".
Ronald Reagan's life was rich
not only in public achievement, but also in private
happiness. Indeed, his public achievements were
rooted in his private happiness.
The great turning point of
his life was his meeting and marriage with Nancy.
On that we have the plain testimony
of a loving and grateful husband: 'Nancy came
along and saved my soul'.
We share her grief today. But
we also share her pride - and the grief and pride
of Ronnie's children.For the final years of his
life, Ronnie's mind was clouded by illness. That
cloud has now lifted. He is himself again - more
himself than at any time on this earth.For we
may be sure that the Big Fella Upstairs never
forgets those who remember Him.
And as the last journey of
this faithful pilgrim took him beyond the sunset,
and as heaven's morning broke, I like to think
- in the words of Bunyan - that 'all the trumpets
sounded on the other side'.
We here still move in twilight.
But we have one beacon to guide us that Ronald
Reagan never had. We have his example.
Let us give thanks today for
a life that achieved so much for all of God's
children.
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