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Prime Ministers and Some Others: A Book of Reminiscences

Chapter 4 BENJAMIN DISRAEI

Word Count: 1720    |    Released on: 01/12/2017

y chance of hearing Parliamentary debates was small. In the summer of 1866, when the Russell-Gladstone Reform Bill was thrown out, I was in the country, and therefore I had missed the excitemen

most famous debates in Committee on the Tory Reform Bill, and thereby learned for the first time the fascination of Disraeli's genius. The Whigs, among whom I was reared, did not dislike "Dizzy" as they disliked Lord Derby, or as Dizzy himself wa

e summer; but high above them all towers, in my recollection, the strange and sinister figure of the great Disraeli. The Whigs had laughed at him for thirty years; but now, to use a phrase of the nursery, they laughed on the wrong side of their mouths. There was nothing ludicrous about him now, nothing to provoke a smile, except when he wished to provoke it, and gaily unhorsed his opponents of every type-Gladstone, or Lowe, or Beresford-Hope. He seemed, for the moment, to dominate the House of Commons, to pervad

g. "Gladstone," wrote Lord Houghton to a friend, "seems quite awed with the diabolical cleverness of Dizzy, who, he says, is gradually driving all ideas of political honour out of the House, and accustoming it to the m

consider Semitic. He might have been a Spaniard or an Italian, but he certainly was not a Briton. He was rather tall than short, but slightly bowed, except when he drew himself up for the more effective d

his age and class, in a black frock-coat worn open, a waistcoat cut rather deep, light-coloured trousers, and a black cravat tied in a loose bow-and those spring-sided boots of soft material which used to be called "Jem

the Table, was thundering his protests, Disraeli became absolutely statuesque, eyed his opponent stonily through his monocle, and then congratulated himself, in a kind of stage drawl, that there was a "good broad piece of furniture" between him and the enraged Leader of the Opposition. But when it was hi

eech, or manner. What he had been when he was fighting his Reform Bill through the House, that he was when, as Prime Minister, he governed the country at the head of a Parliamentary minority. His triumph was the triumph of audacity. In 1834 he had said to

ery well to say that the candle of the wicked is put out in the long run; that they are as stubble before the wind, and as chaff that the storm carries away. So we were told in other times of tribulation. This was the sort of consolation that used to be offered in the jaunty days of Lord Palme

e is a man sprung from an inferior station; another good thing in these days, as showing the liberality of our institutions. But

beral party, and the Liberals could now defeat the Government whenever they chose to mass their forces. Disraeli was officially the Leader of a House in which his opponents had a large majority. In March, 1868, Gladstone began his attack o

s statement amounted to this-that, in spite of adverse votes, he intended to hold on till the autumn, and then to appeal to the new electorate created by the Reform Act of the previous year. As the one question to be submitted to the electors was that of the Irish Church, the campaign natu

p without waiting for a hostile vote of the new Parliament. He declined the Earldom to which, as an ex-Prime Minister, he was by usage entitled; but he asked the Queen to make his devoted wife Viscountess Beaconsfield. As a y

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1 Chapter 1 LORD PALMERSTON2 Chapter 2 LORD RUSSELL3 Chapter 3 LORD DERBY4 Chapter 4 BENJAMIN DISRAEI5 Chapter 5 WILLIAM EWART GLADSTONE6 Chapter 6 LORD SALISBURY7 Chapter 7 LORD ROSEBERY8 Chapter 8 AUTHUR JAMES BALFOUR9 Chapter 9 HENRY CAMPBELL-BANNERMAN10 Chapter 10 GLADSTONE-AFTER TWENTY YEARS11 Chapter 11 HENRY SCOTT HOLLAND[ ]12 Chapter 12 LORD HALIFAX13 Chapter 13 LORD AND LADY RIPON[ ]14 Chapter 14 FREDDY LEVESON 15 Chapter 15 SAMUEL WHITBREAD16 Chapter 16 HENRY MONTAGU BUTLER17 Chapter 17 BASIL WILBERFORCE[ ]18 Chapter 18 EDITH SICHEL19 Chapter 19 WILL GLADSTONE20 Chapter 20 LORD CHARLES RUSSELL21 Chapter 21 A STRANGE EPIPHANY22 Chapter 22 THE ROMANCE OF RENUNCIATION23 Chapter 23 PAN-ANGLICANISM24 Chapter 24 LIFE AND LIBERTY25 Chapter 25 LOVE AND PUNISHMENT26 Chapter 26 HATRED AND LOVE27 Chapter 27 THE TRIUMPHS OF ENDURANCE28 Chapter 28 A SOLEMN FARCE29 Chapter 29 MIRAGE30 Chapter 30 MIST31 Chapter 31 DISSOLVING THROES 32 Chapter 32 INSTITUTIONS AND CHARACTER33 Chapter 33 REVOLUTION-AND RATIONS34 Chapter 34 THE INCOMPATIBLES 35 Chapter 35 FREEDOM'S NEW FRIENDS36 Chapter 36 EDUCATION AND THE JUDGE37 Chapter 37 THE GOLDEN LADDER38 Chapter 38 OASES39 Chapter 39 LIFE, LIBERTY, AND JUSTICE40 Chapter 40 THE STATE AND THE BOY41 Chapter 41 A PLEA FOR THE INNOCENTS42 Chapter 42 THE HUMOROUS STAGE 43 Chapter 43 THE JEWISH REGIMENT44 Chapter 44 INDURATION45 Chapter 45 FLACCIDITY46 Chapter 46 THE PROMISE OF MAY47 Chapter 47 PAGEANTRY AND PATRIOTISM48 Chapter 48 A FORGOTTEN PANIC49 Chapter 49 A CRIMEAN EPISODE