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Disraeli's Politics

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  12 February 2009

Extract

‘COULD I only satisfy myself that D’Israeli believed all that he said, I should be more happy: his historical views are quite mine, but does he believe them?’ Lord John Manners, who wrote these words at the height of the Young England episode in 1843,1 has never lacked for company in his puzzlement. ‘The question’, says Lord Blake, ‘echoes emptily down the years. We can answer it no more certainly today than Lord John Manners could then.’2 Yet if the answer is elusive, so, in a sense, is the question: that is, the question which will most help us to understand the character of Disraeli’s ideas and their relation to the form and conduct of his career. The question whether Disraeli believed in the literal descriptive and moral truth of the views he propounded, if that is what Manners was asking, is not only unanswerable but also, perhaps, unimportant—unimportant, that is, if what we are concerned with is the genesis and instrumentality of Disraeli’s political postulates rather than their status as ‘principles’.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Royal Historical Society 1987

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References

1 Whibley, C., Lord John Manners and His Friends (2 vols., Edinburgh & London, 1925), i. 149Google Scholar.

2 Blake, R., Disraeli (1966), 175Google Scholar.

3 Diary, 12 12. 1880, in Davidson, R.T. and Benham, W., Life of Archibald Campbell Tait, Archbishop of Canterbury, 3rd ed. (2 vols., 1891), ii. 429Google Scholar.

4 To Meynell, W., September. 1903, in Blunt, W. S., My Diaries: Being a Personal Narrative of Events 1888–1314 (2 vols., 1921), ii. 71–2Google Scholar. In November 1910, Blunt had it from Rivers Wilson, who had been Disraeli’s private secretary in 1867–8, that his master ‘was in those days still the farceur he had been in his youth, having his tongue in his cheek and not pretending to be serious when behind the scenes.… It was not till after the Congress of Berlin, ten years later, that he began to take himself au grand sérieux’ (ibid. ii. 325–6).

5 Watson, G., The English Ideology: Studies in the Language of Victorian Politics (1973), 130Google Scholar.

6 The views on race, religion, and the Jews expounded in Coningsby, Tancred, and Lord George Bentinck, and in the debates on Jewish disabilities are a prime example. Russell once praised Disraeli’s tenacity in a speech on Jewish emancipation, ‘tho’ he knows that every word he says is gall and wormwood to every man who sits around and behind him’ (a recollection by Gladstone, inMorley, J., The Life of William Ewart Gladstone (3 vols., 1903), iii.476)Google Scholar. Perhaps Disraeli’s writings did not percolate far enough through his party to cause much perturbation, if we accept his own complaint that ‘they never read … and did not understand the ideas of their own time’ (Stanley's journal, 9 Feb. 1853, in Disraeli, Derby and the Conservative Party: Journals and Memoirs of Edward Henry, Lord Stanley 1849–1869, ed. Vincent, J. (Hassocks, 1978), 96). Yet it is the life of Bentinck that Jawleyford is found reading in c. 15 of Mr. Sponge’s Sporting TourGoogle Scholar.

7 Blake, 761–3, and cf. 211.

8 Ghosh, P. R., ‘Disraelian Conservatism: a Financial Approach, English Historical Review, xcix (1984), especially 268, 293–5.CrossRefGoogle ScholarThe maxim ‘expenditure depends on policy has also impressed Wilson, Harold (The Governance of Britain (1976), 70)Google Scholar.

9 Ghosh, 294, n. 2.

10 General Preface to the Novels’ (1870), in theBradenham Edition of the Novels and Tales of Benjamin Disraeli, 1st Earl of Beaconsfield (12 vols., 19261927), i. xiii–xvGoogle Scholar.

11 Vivian Grey (5 vols., 18261827), bk. I, c. 8Google Scholar.

12 The point is made twice by him and his sister in the jointly authored A Tear at Hartlebury or the Election (2 vols., 1834Google Scholar, under the pseudonyms of ‘Cherry and Fair Star’): ‘In this country where the art most sedulously fostered is the art of making a connection numerous are the established means of arriving at the great result. A public school, a crack college, the turf if you are rich, are all good in their way—but to travel on the Continent is a highly esteemed mode’ (i. c. 2; cf. ii. c. 8). If Disraeli told Rowton thatat Higham Hall ‘the whole drama of public school life was acted in a smaller theatre’ (Blake, 13), his longing for the real thing is strongly suggested by the Eton chapters inConingsby: or the New Generation (3 vols., 1844), bk. I, cc.811Google Scholar. But he convinced himself that his upbringing in his father’s library had given him intellectual advantages over his more conventionally educated competitors in public life. A student of Bayle, he once noted how that author had introduced Sir George Lewis (and by implication him) to ‘a kind of knowledge, unknown to the Universities, & which marked out Lewis from the Gladstones, Lytteltons & all those, who, as far as general knowledge was concerned, were only overgrown schoolboys’ (Disraeli’ Reminiscences, ed. , H. M. and Swartz, M. (1975), 101)Google Scholar.

13 Blake, 49–50.

14 Zangwill, I., Dreamers of the Ghetto (1898), c. 10, ‘The Primrose Sphinx’;Google ScholarRieff, P., ‘Disraeli: the Chosen of History’, Commentary, xiii (1952), 2233;Google ScholarSirBerlin, I., ‘Benjamin Disraeli, Karl Marx and the Search for Identity’, Transactions of the Jewish Historical Society of England, xxii (1970), 120.Google ScholarSee also Roth, C., The Earl of Beaconsfield (New York, 1952), c. 6Google Scholar, ‘Disraeli, Judaism and the Jews’; Salbstein, M. C. N., The Emancipation of the Jews in Britain: the Question of the Admission of the Jews to Parliament, 1828–1860 (1982), c.5Google Scholar, ‘Benjamin Disraeli, Marrano Englishman’; Fisch, H., ‘Disraeli’s Hebraic Compulsions’, in Essays Presented to Chief Rabbi Israel Brodie on the Occasion of His Seventieth Birthday, ed. Zimmels, H.J., Rabbinowitz, J., and Finestein, I. (1967), 8194. Buckle's statement that ‘The fundamental fact about Disraeli was that he was a Jew’Google Scholar(Monypenny, W. F. and Buckle, G. E., The Life of Benjamin Disraeli, Earl of Beaconsfield (6 vols., 19101920), vi, 635)Google Scholarwould not have been contested by Gladstone, who thought Disraeli‘s ‘Judaic feeling’ was, after his wife’s death, ‘the deepest and truest … in his whole mind’ (Morley, ii. 553, and cf. ii.558, iii. 475–6), or by Wilfred Scawen Blunt, who accepted Disraeli’s ‘Semitic’ politics as ‘genuine enough’ (ii. 72). A comprehensive study of the role of Jewishness in the formation of Disraeli’s mind and career is badly needed.

15 Blake, , Disraeli, 204Google Scholar;Disraeli’s, Grand Tour: Benjamin Disraeli and the Holy Land 1830–31 (1982)Google Scholar.

16 Benjamin Disraeli Letters: 1815–1834, ed. Gunn, J. A. W., Matthews, J., Schurman, D. M., Wiebe, M. G. (Toronto, 1982), 447Google Scholar.

17 Monypenny and Buckle, i. 244–5.

18 Steiner, G., In Bluebeard’s Castle: Some Notes Towards the Re-definition of Culture (1971), 1821Google Scholar.

19 Ibid., 21–2.

20 The nature and function of romanticism in Disraeli’s thought is another subject demanding a thorough treatment. The references to it in pt. I, c. 4 (‘Au “Sanctuaire de la Sensibilité”’) of what is otherwise the most extensive and searching study of Disraeli’s personality and ideas, Maitre, R., Disraeli: Homme de Lettres (Paris, 1963)Google Scholar, are unsatisfying. More can be gleaned from the sensitive probing of Disraeli’s mental world in Richmond’s, C. unpublished Oxford University M.Litt. thesis, ‘The Development of Disraeli's Conservatism 1820–1835’ (1982)Google Scholar, which gives weight to the German influences—imbibed largely through Madame de Stael’s Germany —that helped to render the ‘continental’ mind elusive to its English audience, touched as it was by Kantian and Fichtean notions of the transcendental role of the mind in the apprehension of the world. Disraeli read in translation Goethe, Heine, and Wieland (at least), and was himself admired as an author by the first two: see, e.g., Letters: 1815–1834, 192, 426, 427; Letters: 1835–1837, ed. Gunn, J. A. W., Matthews, J., Schurman, D. M., and Wiebe, M. G. (Toronto, 1982), 51 & n. 20, 124Google Scholar; Hamilton, J. S., ‘Disraeli and Heine’, Disraeli Newsletter, 2 (1977), 8.Google ScholarHisContarini Fleming: a Psychological Auto-Biography (4 vols., 1832)Google Scholarwas among several English novels, including his friendBulwer’s, The Disowned (1828)Google Scholar, modelled on Goethe’s Wilhelm Meister (author’s preface to the 1845 edition of Contarini Fleming, Bradenham Edition, iv, ix; Ashton, R., The German Idea: Four English Writers and the Reception of German Thought 1800–1860 (Cambridge, 1980), 22)Google Scholar.

21 On the contrast of the two concepts, see Collini, S., ‘The Idea of “Character” in Victorian Political Thought’, T.R.H.S. 5th series, xxxv (1985), 37–8, who notes the debt of the former to German romanticism. The antagonism between Disraeli and Gladstone could almost be summed up as Bildung versus ‘character’Google Scholar.

22 Collini points out (40, 43–4) that the advance of ‘character’ was linked with a rejection of the ‘ethics of the salon’ and of the eighteenth-century language of politeness and sociability. Disraeli’s social and intellectual persona was in some ways out of date by mid-century.

23 Though he invested it with uncommon panache, the process is a common one, familiar to students of the ‘dramatistic’ aspects of mental and social life. See, e.g., Lyman, S. M. and Scott, M.B., The Drama of Social Reality (New York, 1975), c. 5Google Scholar. Literary specialists have been cleverer than historians at recognising what Disraeli was doing, notably Schwarz, D. R., Disraeli’s Fiction (1979), c. 1 and 151–2Google Scholar.

24 The artist as (in Hugo’s word) magus was often the first heroic role for the romantic sensibility. The young Marx wrote romantic poetry and contemplated a career as a Dichter (Prawer, S. S., Karl Marx and World Literature (Oxford, 1976), 2)Google Scholar.

25 ‘Mutilated Diary’, 1833, in Letters: 1815–1834, 447.

26 Monypenny, and Buckle, , ii. 371, citing Hansard, 8 05 1846Google Scholar. Perhaps that underestimated the influence of his father.

27 Re-creating in Hartlebury (ii. c. 2) his Red Lion speech of June 1832, Disraeli refers to his hero, Bohun, as ‘a perfect master of stage effect’, and many similar metaphors witness to his sense of the theatrical nature of politics as of life in general. He was almost certainly aware of the ambition to create a drama of national self-consciousness entertained by the German romantics, e.g.Schlegel, Friedrich, the title and Spanish setting of whose tragedy, Alarcos (1802)Google Scholarhe reproduced in his own The Tragedy of Count Alarms in 1839. Yet the capacity to involve a national audience in the dramatic projection of politics on the grandest scale was to elude him: if we follow Vincent, John (Pollbooks: How Victorians Voted (Cambridge, 1967), 47), it was Gladstone who ‘created a national theatre for England as Verdi did for nineteenth-century Italy’Google Scholar.

28 The process may be seen as the progressive generalisation of the self-presenting individual’s need to try to control the response of others to him by ‘influencing the definition of the situation which the others come to formulate … the object of a performer is to sustain a particular definition of the situation, this representing, as it were, his claim as to what reality is’ (E. Goffman, The Presentation of Self in Everyday Life (English ed., 1969), 3, 74).

29 The second aspect is rarely well assimilated into attempts to give a systematic account of Disraeli’s political ideas, but see Stafford, W., ‘Romantic Elitism in the Thought of Benjamin Disraeli’, Literature and History, vi (1980), 4358Google Scholar.

30 Hartlebury, i.e. 14.

31 Letters: 1815–1834, 207.

32 ‘Toryism is worn out’, he told Austen in June 1832, ‘and I cannot condescend to be a Whig’ (ibid., 285). His letters during his wooing of Wycombe hint at a Tory penchant but show readiness to tack in any direction to gain the seat (ibid., nos. 133n4, 141–2, 144, 163, 167–8, 173, 179, 184, 188, n. 1, 198–9, 202). The tactical considerations are well outlined inDavis, R. W., Disraeli (1976), 2834Google Scholar. Disraeli’s abortive start for the county in December 1832 struck a stronger Tory note.

33 Like Bohun, who ‘had too great a stake in the existing order of society to precipitate a revolution’, but ‘intended to ride the storm, if the hurricane did occur’ (Hartlebury, ii.c. 1).

34 A point well made by Blake, , Disraeli, 90–1Google Scholar. His friend Bulwer’s example no doubt influenced Disraeli’s adoption of a radical posture.

35 His Wycombe address of 1 Oct. 1832 had already called on Englishmen to ‘rid yourselves of all that political jargon and factious slang of Whig and Tory’ and unite in a great national party (Letters: 1815–1834, 305).

36 The Diaries of John Bright, ed. Walling, R.A.J. (1930), 130Google Scholar.

37 England and France: a Cure for the Ministerial Gallomania (1832), 13, 50–1. Bohun follows the same progressive but national line. Change in the relations between the governors and the governed must occur, but ‘he thought it the duty of a great statesman only to effect that quantity of change in the country whose destiny he regulated which could be achieved with deference to its existing constitution’. He, too, meant to guide the ‘movement’ through a new party (Hartlebury, ii.c. 1).

38 Ibid.

39 Quoted in Mallet, B., Thomas George Earl of Northbrook G.C.S.I.: a Memoir (1908), 33Google Scholar.

40 Hartlebury, ii.c. 1.

41 Ibid.

42 Apparently first heard in the speech of November 1832 at Wycombe quoted in Monypenny and Buckle, i. 219.

43 See his remarks on them to his sister, 26 May 1832, in Letters: 1815–1834, 280–1.

44 Byronl, to Hobhouse, , 26 06 1819, in Byron’s Letters and Journals, ed. Marchand, L.A., vi (1976), 166.Google ScholarCf. Disraeli’s, ‘the greatest gentleman I ever knew’ (Reminiscences, 37)Google Scholar.

45 Dinwiddy, J. R., ‘Sir Francis Burdett and Burdettite Radicalism’, History, lxv (1980), 1731CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

46 Reminiscences, 37. He canvassed for Burdett in the 1837 Westminster by-election, in which the latter was effectively the Tory candidate. Another Radical figure describing himself as ‘a Tory of Queen Anne’s reign’ with whom Disraeli later had dealings was David Urquhart(Anderson, O., A Liberal State at War: English Politics and Economics During the Crimean War (1967), 142, 145, 147–8)Google Scholar.

47 Grey in 1830 had, however, provided government places for eight of his nearest relatives and friends; and it was Gladstone who remarked in 1855 that the ‘prizes’ of public life were ‘air, light, heat, electricity, meat and drink and everything else to that which meets at Brooks’s’(quoted in Southgate, D., The Passing of the Whigs 1832–1886 (1962), 201)Google Scholar.

48 Brewer, J., Party Ideology and Popular Politics at the Accession of George III (Cambridge, 1976), 19CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

49 Colley, L., In Defiance of Oligarchy: the Tory Party 1714–60 (Cambridge, 1982), 173.CrossRefGoogle ScholarCf. herEighteenth-century English Radicalism Before Wilkes’, T.R.H.S. 5th series, xxxi (1981), 119Google Scholar. Increasing Tory dependence on open constituencies was a factor in bringing closer involvement with popular opinion and participation. There was an obvious tension between encouragement of popular ferment and the Tory belief in social subordination, and the ending after 1760 of the Tories’ exclusion from power and place made their attitudes more conservative, yet there was still a significant Tory contribution to the Wilkite movement.

50 Though the reconciliation continued to be strenuously pursued in 1835, as Disraeli responded angrily to charges of ratting on a Radical past provoked by his appearance as Tory candidate for Taunton with attempts to demonstrate the congruity of the ‘primitive Toryism’ he was professing with his previous Radical gestures (Letters: 1835–1837, nos. 379, 398, 406, 409, 415, 458; Monypenny and Buckle, i. 282–4).

51 The process was also, as with that of individual self-realisation, intended to be a purging of corruptions and a restoration of purity, which assimilated it to the idea of the salvation of the corrupt state through the exercise of civic virtue transmitted by writers such as Bolingbroke from Macchiavelli and embodied to some degree in nineteenth-century Radical criticisms of the perversion of the ancient constitution to oligarchic forms by an oppressive aristocracy. Disraeli’s use of history, partly as a means to satisfy the romantic longing for a sense of community, requires a study.

52 Disraeli, B., Vindication of the English Constitution in a Letter to a Noble and Learned Lord (1835), c. 31. Bolingbroke believed as profoundly as Disraeli in the power of superior spirits in public affairs. ‘These are they’, he wrote, ‘;who engross almost the whole reason of the species; who are born to instruct, to guide, and to preserve; who are designed to be the tutors and the guardians of human kind’Google Scholar(The Works of Lord Bolingbroke (4 vols., 1844), ii. 352)Google Scholar. In Sybil or: The Two Nations (1845), Disraeli recognised a second exemplar in Burke, who ‘effected for the Whigs what Bolingbroke in a preceding age had done for the Tories: he restored the moral existence of the party’, suffusing their ‘ancient principles’ with ‘all the delusive splendour of his imagination’ (bk. I, c. 3).

53 To the Rev. A. Beaven, 17 Jan. 1874, in Monypenny and Buckle, i. 222.

54 The language emphasises the historical cast of Disraeli’s vision. The image of politicians seeking to emulate the Venetian polity and turn the king into a mere Doge went back at least to the late seventeenth century: see The Parliamentary Diary of Narcissus Luttrell 1691–1693, ed. Horwitz, H. (Oxford, 1972), 1011 (9 11. 1691)Google Scholar.

55 Works, ii. 48.

56 Vindication, cc. 28– 32. Cf. The Crisis Examined (1834), 16: ‘The people have their passions, and it is even the duty of public men occasionally to adopt sentiments with which they do not sympathise, because the people must have leaders.’

31 Paradoxically, of course, the politics of the transcendence of faction à la Bolingbroke had to be employed by Disraeli as a strategy of partisan advantage, since, standing outside the established political elite, he was dependent on party for his rise. The elision of a national standpoint into a sectional platform was to be a central feature of the Conservative party he helped to shape.

58 Peel to Graham, 22 Dec. 1843, in Parker, C. S., Sir Robert Peel from His Private Papers (3 vols., 18911899), iii. 425Google Scholar.

59 In chapter 3 of the Vindication, Disraeli had developed the notion that nations had characters like individuals, and, like individuals, ascertained by self-examination their principles for right conduct. It is significant that, as he pursued that collective self-scrutiny, he offered ‘to the new generation’ a new edition of his paradigm of the individual search, Contarini Fleming (see the July 1845 preface, Bradenham Edition, iv. xi). The realisation of the individual self was continued alongside the collective quest in the trilogy: R. O'Kell, indeed, would see Coningsby as concerned less with contemporary politics than with the definition of ‘an ideal identity or role of heroic individualism’(Disraeli’s “Coningsby”: Political Manifesto or Psychological Romance?’, Victorian Studies, xxiii (1979), 58, 70)Google Scholar. The frustrating nature of his parliamentary situation in the early 1840s no doubt accounts in part for Disraeli's undertaking through the novel the enterprise of teaching his contemporaries to think: literature was the way to reach the public opinion which he chose to see as more powerful and enlightened than an unrepresentative House of Commons, and to realise his idea of a great man as ‘one who affects the mind of his generation’ (Coningsby, bk. Ill, c. 2, bk. VII, c. 2, and preface to the 5th ed., 1849, quoted inBlake, , Disraeli, 193)Google Scholar.

60 The appeal to aristocracy chimed not only with Disraeli's sense of his own aristocratic nature but with the argument of the Vindication that the peers were more truly representative of the people than the House of Commons.

61 The image of the ‘two nations8 so strongly associated with Disraeli reflects the receptivity of his mind to whatever was in the air. A character inHeine’s, play William Ratcliff (1822)Google Scholarspeaks of ‘two nations ever at war, the well fed and the hungry’. In the 1840s, Lorenz von Stein was developing on the Continent the analysis of the dangers of class cleavage in modern industrial and urban society which derived largely from Hegel, and in Britain a Tory Radical like Ferrand could speak of the division of society ‘into two classes—the very rich and the very poor’ (at Manchester, 14 Dec. 1843; quoted bySouthgate, D., ‘From Disraeli to Law’, in The Conservatives: a History From Their Origins to 1965, ed. Butler, Lord (1977), 121)Google Scholar.

62 For Maidstone, see Monypenny and Buckle, i. 375; Letters: 1835–1837, 284, n. 1. Apparently the mob offered Disraeli bacon and ham. The ‘Shylock’ taunt had been used against him in a broadside following the Taunton election of 1835 (ibid., 49, n. 11).

63 Ibid., 323–4 (5 Dec. 1837).

64 Letters: 1815–1834, 447.

65 ‘On the Life and Writings of Mr.Disraeli. By His Son’; preface toD'Israeli, I., Curiosities of Literature (14th ed., 3 vols., 1849)Google Scholar, i. xxiii. In Tancred (bk. V, c. 5), Disraeli had written scathingly of Mile, de Laurella, who ‘felt persuaded that the Jews would not be so much disliked if they were better known: that all they had to do was to imitate as closely as possible the habits and customs of the nation among whom they chanced to live’, and ‘really did believe that eventually, such was the progressive spirit of the age, a difference in religion would cease to be regarded, and that a respectable Hebrew, particularly if well dressed and well mannered, might be able to pass through society without being discovered, or at least noticed. Consummation of the destiny of the favourite people of the Creator of the universe!’.

66 ‘Assuming that the popular idea of Inspiration be abandoned, & the difference between sacred & profane history relinquished, what would be the position of the Hebrew race in universal History, viewed with reference to their influence on Man?’. Disraeli thought in 1863 of offering a prize for the best essay on this theme, to be judged by Gladstone, Stanley, A. P., and himself (Disraeli's Reminiscences, 103–4)Google Scholar.

67 Coningsby, bk. IV, c. 10.

68 Chamberlain, H. S., Foundations of the Nineteenth Century (1899), trans. Lees, J. (2 vols., New York, 1977), i. 2711. Little has been done to relate Disraeli’s harping on race to the growth of racial ideology in his day. Sidonia’s ‘All is race; there is no other truth’ (Tancred, bk. II, c. 14) may be set beside the Edinburgh anatomistGoogle ScholarKnox's, Robert ‘in human history race is everything’ (The Races of Men (1850), quoted in Watson, 205)Google Scholar. It might be argued that race and the Hebrew race provided for Disraeli the conceptual tools for the ideological transformation of a hostile environment which class and the proletariat provided for Marx.

69 Disraeli’s Reminiscences, 103. Here and elsewhere, Disraeli no doubt owed something to the views of his father: see D'Israeli, I., The Genius of Judaism (2nd ed., 1833), especially 14, 211Google Scholar.

70 Disraeli, B., Lord George Bentinck: a Political Biography (1851), c. 24Google Scholar.

71 Disraeli’s position had parallels with those ofBerryer (father’s name: Mittelberger), the spokesman set up as a country gentleman by the ‘parliamentary’ legitimists in France, and the converted Jew Stahl, who led the Prussian conservatives in midcentury. His status as virtually a hired hand, Lord Stanley’s man of business, rendered the assumption of aristocratic credentials all the more necessary.

72 A propos ofTancred, Fisch (93) remarks: ‘He was betraying his Jewish instincts, whilst at the same time he was using them as the ground for his characteristic political ideology’.

73 Stanley’s, journal, Disraeli, Derby and the Conservative Party, 32–3Google Scholar. Stanley recorded this as the only instance of Disraeli’s displaying ‘signs of any higher emotion’ than ‘irritation or pleasurable excitement’, and noted Disraeli‘s preoccupation with matters relating to the Hebrews and his ambition to write ‘the Life of Christ from a national point of view’ (cf. on the latter point, ibid., 107, 5–6 May 1853). The implication of Alroy seems to be that Jabaster’s ‘national’ vision represents the true path. Blake, (Disraeli’s Grand Tour, 113Google Scholar, 131) holds, first, that it is impossible to envisage Disraeli’s even dreaming of restoring the Jews to Jerusalem, then, that it is impossible to tell whether he did or not.

74 England, mighty England, free England, England that surveys the seven seas, will understand us and our aspirations’: opening address to the fourth Zionist Congress, London, 13 08. 1900,Google Scholarin Herzl, T., Zionisl Writings: Essays and Addresses (2 vols., New York, 1973), ii. 154Google Scholar. Herzl put Disraeli's name first in a proposed series of literary profiles of ‘representative exponents of the Zionist, idea for his new paper, Die Welt (15 05 1897:Google ScholarThe Complete Diaries of Theodor Herzl, ed. Patai, R. (5 vols., New York & London, 1960), ii. 548)Google Scholar.

75 Vereté, M., ‘The Restoration of the Jews in English Protestant Thought 1790–1840’, Middle Eastern Studies, viii (1972), 350CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

76 c. 34. It was Disraeli’s view that the winning of English liberties had depended on the inspiration of the Old Testament. ‘Philosophically considered’, he noted of theRebellion, Great, ‘it might be looked upon as the influence of Hebrew literature on the northern mind—as no doubt the translator of the Bible did it all’ (Reminiscences, 89)Google Scholar.

77 Cf. Zangwill, 386; Fisch, 89–90, who argues that ‘Disraeli’s imperialism takes its place alongside Marxist communism as one of the messianic religions or pseudoreligions of the nineteenth century. Both have their origins in a more or less perverted Hebraism’. Disraeli might have been intrigued to hear a prime minister of Israel declare that his people had learned from Britain ‘how to sustain a unique national character while preserving that which is precious to humanity as a whole’ (Shimon Peres to the Royal Institute of International Affairs, 22 Jan. 1986: text circulated by the Information Department of the Embassy of Israel, London).