Dizzy: The Life And Nature of Benjamin Disraeli,Earl of Beaconsfield (Penguin Classic Biography S.)

Dizzy: The Life And Nature of Benjamin Disraeli,Earl of Beaconsfield (Penguin Classic Biography S.)

by Michael Holroyd (Introduction), Michael Holroyd (Introduction), Hesketh Pearson (Author)

Synopsis

Benjamin Disraeli (1804-1881) is regarded as the founder of the modern Conservative Party. Although his ancestry was Jewish, he became one of the most popular politicians of the 19th century. Aspiring to "one nation" Toryism, he stole the liberal's clothes by piloting through Parliament the Reform Bill of 1867 which enfranchised large numbers of working men. His grandiose foreign policy proved popular in an age when Britain really ruled the waves. He bestowed the title of Empress of India on Queen Victoria and acquired Fiji, the Transvaal, Cyprus and the Suez Canal. But it was his personality that was extraordinary. He was a reckless gambler with his career, an accomplished novelist, a deadly debater and a man who adored and was adored by his wife, who he claimed he married for her money. Hesketh Pearson's biography presents a glimpse of politics in a more colourful age.

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More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 320
Edition: New edition
Publisher: Penguin Classics
Published: 25 Oct 2001

ISBN 10: 0141390891
ISBN 13: 9780141390895

Author Bio
Hesketh Pearson was born in 1887 and educated at Bedford Grammar School. After two years in the City of London, he went onto the stage and, apart from seeing active service during the First World War in Persia and Mesopotamia, he continued to act until 1931 when he abandoned his stage career in order to write. His many biographies include those of Gilbert & Sullivan, William Shakespeare, Charles Dickens, Oscar Wilde and George Bernard Shaw. He died in 1964.