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Biography & Autobiography Historical

Benjamin Disraeli Letters

1848-1851, Volume V

by (author) Benjamin Disraeli

edited by J.B. Conacher & M.G. Wiebe

Publisher
University of Toronto Press
Initial publish date
Nov 1993
Category
Historical, Great Britain, History & Theory
  • Hardback

    ISBN
    9780802029270
    Publish Date
    Nov 1993
    List Price
    $155.00

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Description

Against a European background of the 1848 revolutions and Louis Napoleon's 1851 coup, the 602 letters of this volume cover Disraeli's accession to the leadership of his party in the House of Commons and his first attempts to move the party beyond reactionary protectionism and ultra-Protestantism. In this period, Disraeli works hard at all aspects of his new role, finding 'good men' to bring into the party, patching rifts within it, and establishing a new platform on which to maintain the system of landed aristocracy in the age of free trade. When the chance to form a government comes, however, his party is unsuccessful.

The turmoil in the world at large is matched by that in Disraeli's own affairs. Foremost are the deaths of his father, a central figure in his intellectual development, and of Lord George Bentinck, the anchor of his financial and political strategies. Once again, his creditors threaten to drive him from public life, and come alarmingly close to success on at least one occasion. In addition, his marriage goes through a major crisis, as Mary Anne Disraeli's jealousy over his frequent correspondence with Lady Londonderry and his regular visits to her precipitates an actual separation and period of estrangement.

His major correspondent and confidante continues to be his sister Sarah, but there are also a surprising number of letters (many of them previously unpublished) to major figures such as Metternich and Derby. The volume ends with the exchanges between Disraeli and other political leaders on the verge of a second chance at government, which in 1852 will bring a brief taste of power at last.

About the authors

Benjamin Disraeli (1804-1881) was one of the most important figures in nineteenth-century Europe, spending three decades in British government and twice serving as prime minister, as well as being a well-known literary figure. A convert to Anglicanism, he was Britain's first and thus far only Prime Minister of Jewish heritage.

Benjamin Disraeli's profile page

J.B. Conacher's profile page

M.G. Wiebe is the general editor of the Disraeli Project and a professor emeritus in the Department of English at Queen's University.

M.G. Wiebe's profile page

Editorial Reviews

'Toronto's new volume deserves a hearty cheer. ...it is beautifully produced, maintaining the exceptional standards set by its predecessors.'

The Spectator

'Impeccably edited - I found no errors of even the slightest kind - and exhaustively, but never exhaustingly, annotated, this volume deserves Disraelian superlatives....these volumes...are becoming by virtue of their scholarship essential reference books on Victorian politics, society, and literature.'

English Studies in Canada

'Here, meticulously edited and splendidly presented, are 600 letters for the period 1848-51, accompanied by a wealth of supplementary information in footnotes.'

TLS

'One runs out of superlatives to describe the scrupulous and informative editing.'

Victorian Periodicals Review

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