His Novels.
To the general his novels must always
be a kind of caviare; for they have no analogue in
letters, but are the output of a mind and temper of
singular originality. To the honest Tory, sworn
to admire and unable to comprehend, they must seem
inexplicable as abnormal. To the professional
Radical they are so many proofs of innate inferiority:
for they are full of pretentiousness and affectation;
they teem with examples of all manner of vices, from
false English to an immoral delight in dukes; they
prove their maker a trickster and a charlatan in every
page. To them, however, whose first care is
for rare work, the series of novels that began with
Vivian Grey and ended with Endymion is
one of the pleasant facts in modern letters.
These books abound in wit and daring, in originality
and shrewdness, in knowledge of the world and in knowledge
of men; they contain many vivid and striking studies
of character, both portrait and caricature; they sparkle
with speaking phrases and happy epithets; they are
aglow with the passion of youth, the love of love,
the worship of physical beauty, the admiration of
whatever is costly and select and splendid from
a countess to a castle, from a duke to a diamond; they
are radiant with delight in whatever is powerful or
personal or attractive from a cook to a
cardinal, from an agitator to an emperor. They
often remind you of Voltaire, often of Balzac, often
of The Arabian Nights. You pass from
an heroic drinking bout to a brilliant criticism of
style; from rhapsodies on bands and ortolans
that remind you of Heine to a gambling scene that
for directness and intensity may vie with the bluntest
and strongest work of Prosper Merimee; from the extravagant
impudence of Popanilla to the sentimental rodomontade
of Henrietta Temple; from ranting romanticism
in Alroy to vivid realism in Sybil.
Their author gives you no time to weary of him, for
he is worldly and passionate, fantastic and trenchant,
cynical and ambitious, flippant and sentimental, ornately
rhetorical and triumphantly simple in a breath.
He is imperiously egoistic, but while constantly
parading his own personality he is careful never to
tell you anything about it. And withal he is
imperturbably good-tempered: he brands and gibbets
with a smile, and with a smile he adores and applauds.
Intellectually he is in sympathy with character of
every sort; he writes as becomes an artist who has
recognised that ’the conduct of men depends upon
the temperament, not upon a bunch of musty maxims,’
and that ’there is a great deal of vice that
is really sheer inadvertence.’ It is said
that the Monmouth of Coningsby and the Steyne
of Vanity Fair are painted from one and the
same original; and you have but to compare the savage
realism of Thackeray’s study to the scornful
amenity of the other’s as you have
but to contrast the elaborate and extravagant cruelty
of Thackeray’s Alcide de Mirobolant with the
polite and half-respectful irony of Disraeli’s
treatment of the cooks in Tancred to
perceive that in certain ways the advantage is not
with ‘the greatest novelist of his time,’
and that the Monmouth produces an impression which
is more moral because more kindly and humane than
the impression left by the Steyne, while in its way
it is every whit as vivid and as convincing.
Yet another excellence, and a great one, is his mastery
of apt and forcible dialogue. The talk of Mr.
Henry James’s personages is charmingly equable
and appropriate, but it is also trivial and tame;
the talk in Anthony Trollope is surprisingly natural
and abundant, but it is also commonplace and immemorable;
the talk of Mr. George Meredith is always eloquent
and fanciful, but the eloquence is too often dark
and the fancy too commonly inhuman. What Disraeli’s
people have to say is not always original nor profound,
but it is crisply and happily phrased and uttered,
it reads well, its impression seldom fails of permanency.
His Wit and Wisdom is a kind of Talker’s
Guide or Handbook of Conversation.
How should it be otherwise, seeing that it contains
the characteristic utterances of a great artist in
life renowned for memorable speech?
A Contrast.
Now, if you ask a worshipper of him
that was so long his rival, to repeat a saying, a
maxim, a sentence, of which his idol is the author,
it is odds but he will look like a fool, and visit
you with an evasive answer. What else should
he do? His deity is a man of many words and no
sayings. He is the prince of agitators, but it
would be impossible for him to mint a definition of
‘agitation’; he is the world’s most
eloquent arithmetician, but it is beyond him to epigrammatise
the fact that two and two make four. And it
seems certain, unless the study of Homer and religious
fiction inspire him to some purpose, that his contributions
to axiomatic literature will be still restricted to
the remark that ’There are three courses open’
to something or other: to the House, to the angry
cabman, to what and whomsoever you will. In sober
truth, he is one who writes for to-day, and takes
no thought of either yesterdays or morrows. For
him the Future is next session; the Past does not extend
beyond his last change of mind. He is a prince
of journalists, and his excursions into monthly literature
remain to show how great and copious a master of the
’leader’ ornate, imposing, absolutely
insignificant his absorption in politics
has cost the English-speaking world.
His Backgrounds.
Disraeli’s imagination, at once
practical and extravagant, is not of the kind that
delights in plot and counterplot. His novels
abound in action, but the episodes wear a more or
less random look: the impression produced is
pretty much that of a story of adventure. But
if they fail as stories they are unexceptionable as
canvases. Our author unrolls them with superb
audacity; and rapidly and vigorously he fills them
in with places and people, with faces that are as
life and words expressive even as they. Nothing
is too lofty or too low for him. He hawks at
every sort of game, and rarely does he make a false
cast. It is but a step from the wilds of Lancashire
to the Arabian Desert, from the cook’s first
floor to the Home of the Bellamonts; for he has the
Seven-League-Boots of the legend, and more than the
genius of adventure of him that wore them. His
castles may be of cardboard, his cataracts of tinfoil,
the sun of his adjurations the veriest figment;
but he never lets his readers see that he knows it.
His irony, sudden and reckless and insidious though
it be, yet never extends to his properties.
There may be a sneer beneath that mask which, with
an egotism baffling as imperturbable, he delights in
intruding among his creations; but you cannot see it.
You suspect its presence, because he is a born mocker.
But you remember that one of his most obvious idiosyncrasies
is an inordinate love of all that is sumptuous, glittering,
radiant, magnificent; and you incline to suspect that
he keeps his sneering for the world of men, and admires
his scenes and decorations too cordially to visit
them with anything so merciless.
His Men and Women.
But dashing and brilliant as are his
sketches of places and things, they are after all
the merest accessories. It was as a student of
Men and Women that he loved to excel, and it is as
their painter that I praise him now. Himself
a worshipper of intellect, it was intellectually that
he mastered and developed them. Like Sidonia
he moves among them not to feel with them but to understand
and learn from them. Such sympathy as he had
was either purely sensuous, as for youth and beauty
and all kinds of comeliness; or purely intellectual,
as for intelligence, artificiality, servility, meanness.
And as his essence was satirical, as he was naturally
irreverent and contemptuous, it follows that he is
best and strongest in the act of punishment not of
reward. His passion for youth was beautiful,
but it did not make him strong. His scorn for
things contemptible, his hate for things hateful, are
at times too bitter even for those who think with
him; but in these lay his force they filled
his brain with light, and they touched his lips with
fire. The wretched Rigby is far more vigorous
and life-like than the amiable Coningsby; Tom Cogit a
sketch, but a sketch of genius is infinitely
more interesting than May Dacre or even the Young Duke;
Tancred is a good fellow, and very real and true in
his goodness, but contrast him with Fakredeen!
And after his knaves, his fools, his tricksters, the
most striking figures in his gallery are those whom
he has considered from a purely intellectual point
of view: either kindly, as Sidonia, or coolly,
as Lord Monmouth, but always calmly and with no point
of passion in his regard: the Eskdales, Villebecques,
Ormsbys, Bessos, Marneys, Meltons, and Mirabels,
the Bohuns and St. Aldegondes and Grandisons, the Tadpoles
and the Tapers, the dominant and subaltern humanity
of the world. All these are drawn with peculiar
boldness of line, precision of touch, and clearness
of intention. And as with his men so is it with
his women: the finest are not those he likes
best but those who interested him most. Male
and female, his eccentrics surpass his commonplaces.
He had a great regard for girls, and his attitude
towards them, or such of them as he elected heroines,
was mostly one of adoration magnificent
yet a little awkward and strained. With women,
married women, he had vastly more in common:
he could admire, study, divine, without having to feign
a warmer feeling; and while his girls are poor albeit
splendid young persons, his matrons are usually delightful.
Edith Millbank is not a very striking figure in Coningsby;
but her appearance in Tancred well,
you have only to compare it to the resurrection of
Laura Bell, as Mrs. Pendennis to see how good it is.
His Style.
Now and then the writing is bad, and
the thought is stale. Disraeli had many mannerisms,
innate and acquired. His English was frequently
loose and inexpressive; he was apt to trip in his
grammar, to stumble over ’and which,’
and to be careless about the connection between his
nominatives and his verbs. Again, he could scarce
ever refrain from the use of gorgeous commonplaces
of sentiment and diction. His taste was sometimes
ornately and barbarically conventional; he wrote as
an orator, and his phrases often read as if he had
used them for the sake of their associations rather
than themselves. His works are a casket of such
stage jewels of expression as ‘Palladian structure,’
‘Tusculan repose,’ ‘Gothic pile,’
‘pellucid brow,’ ‘mossy cell,’
and ‘dew-bespangled meads.’ He delighted
in ‘hyacinthine curls’ and ‘lustrous
locks,’ in ’smiling parterres’
and ‘stately terraces.’ He seldom
sat down in print to anything less than a ‘banquet’,
he was capable of invoking ’the iris pencil
of Hope’; he could not think nor speak of the
beauties of woman except as ‘charms.’
Which seems to show that to be ‘born in a library,’
and have Voltaire that impeccable master
of the phrase for your chief of early heroes
and exemplars is not everything.
His Oratory.
It is admitted, I believe, that he
had many of the qualities of a great public speaker:
that he had an admirable voice and an excellent method;
that his sequences were logical and natural, his arguments
vigorous and persuasive; that he was an artist in
style, and in the course of a single speech could
be eloquent and vivacious, ornate and familiar, passionate
and cynical, deliberately rhetorical and magnificently
fantastic in turn; that he was a master of all oratorical
modes of irony and argument, of stately
declamation and brilliant and unexpected antithesis,
of caricature and statement and rejoinder alike; that
he could explain, denounce, retort, retract, advance,
defy, dispute, with equal readiness and equal skill;
that he was unrivalled in attack and unsurpassed in
defence; and that in heated debate and on occasions
when he felt himself justified in putting forth all
his powers and in striking in with the full weight
of his imperious and unique personality he was the
most dangerous antagonist of his time. And yet,
in spite of his mysterious and commanding influence
over his followers in spite, too, of the
fact that he died assuredly the most romantic and
perhaps the most popular figure of his time it
is admitted withal that he was lacking in a certain
quality of temperament, that attribute great orators
possess in common with great actors: the power,
that is, of imposing oneself upon an audience not
by argument nor by eloquence, not by the perfect utterance
of beautiful and commanding speech nor by the enunciation
of eternal principles or sympathetic and stirring
appeals, but by an effect of personal magnetism, by
the expression through voice and gesture and presence
of an individuality, a temperament, call it what you
will, that may be and is often utterly commonplace
but is always inevitably irresistible. He could
slaughter an opponent, or butcher a measure, or crumple
up a theory with unrivalled adroitness and despatch;
but he could not dominate a crowd to the extent of
persuading it to feel with his heart, think with his
brain, and accept his utterances as the expression
not only of their common reason but of their collective
sentiment as well. He was as incapable of such
a feat as Mr. Gladstone’s Midlothian campaign
as Mr. Gladstone is of producing the gaming scene in
The Young Duke or the ‘exhausted volcanoes’
paragraph in the Manchester speech.
His Speeches as Literature.
As a rule a rule to which
there are some magnificent exceptions orators
have only to cease from speaking to become uninteresting.
What has been heard with enthusiasm is read with
indifference or even with astonishment. You
miss the noble voice, the persuasive gesture, the
irresistible personality; and with the emotional faculty
at rest and the reason at work you are surprised and
it may be a little indignant that you should
have been impressed so deeply as you were by such cold,
bald verbosity as seen in black and white the masterpiece
of yesterday appears to be. To some extent this
is the case with these speeches of Disraeli’s.
At the height of debate, amid the clash of personal
and party animosities, with the cheers of the orator’s
supporters to give them wings, they sounded greater
than they were. But for all that they are vigorous
and profitable yet. Their author’s unfailing
capacity for saying things worth heeding and remembering
is proved in every one of them. It is not easy
to open either of Mr. Kebbel’s volumes without
lighting upon something a string of epigrams,
a polished gibe, a burst of rhetoric, an effective
collocation of words that proclaims the
artist. In this connection the perorations are
especially instructive, even if you consider them
simply as arrangements of sonorous and suggestive
words: as oratorical impressions carefully prepared,
as effects of what may be called vocalised orchestration
touched off as skilfully and with as fine a sense
of sound and of the sentiment to correspond as so
many passages of instrumentation signed ‘Berlioz’
might be.
The Great Earl.
Fruits fail, and love dies, and time
ranges; and only the whippersnapper (that fool of
Time) endureth for ever. Moliere knew him well,
and he said that Moliere was a liar and a thief.
And Disraeli knew him too, and he said that in these
respects Disraeli and Moliere were brothers.
That he said so matters as little now as ever it did;
for though the whippersnapper is immortal in kind,
he is nothing if not futile and ephemeral in effect,
and it was seen long since that in life and death
Disraeli, as became his genius and his race, was the
Uncommonplace incarnate, the antithesis of Grocerdom,
the Satan of that revolt against the yielding habit
of Jéhovah-Bottles the spirit whereof is fast coming
to be our one defence against socialism and the dominion
of the Common Fool. He was no sentimentalist:
as what great artist in government has ever been?
He loved power for power’s sake, and recognising
to the full the law of the survival of the fittest
he preferred his England to the world. He knew
that it is the function of the man of genius to show
that theory is only theory, and that in the House
of Morality there are many mansions. To that
end he lived and died; and it is not until one has
comprehended the complete significance of his life
and death that one is qualified to speak with understanding
of such a life and death as his who passed at Khartoum.