Benjamin Disraeli

1804–1881

Twice elected prime minister of Britain, Benjamin Disraeli initially turned to writing in an effort to repay his debts; his early works were fashionable “silver-fork novels” depicting an aristocratic lifestyle he had yet to attain. When he entered politics, he soon became a prominent member of the emerging Conservative Party and was elected prime minister of Britain in 1868. The only person of Jewish birth to have held this office (he converted to Christianity at age twelve), Disraeli wrote throughout his life, often romances that reflected on political issues and the relationship between Christianity and Judaism.

Entries in the Posen Library by This Creator

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Vivian Grey

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I am not aware that the infancy of Vivian Grey was distinguished by any extraordinary incident. The solicitude of the most affectionate of mothers, and the…

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The Wondrous Tale of Alroy

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And now for my style. I must frankly confess that I have invented a new one. I am conscious of the hazard of such innovation, but I have not adopted my system without long meditation, and a…

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Utilitarian Follies

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A political sect has sprung up avowedly adverse to the Estates of the Realm, and seeking by means which, of course, it holds legal, the abrogation of a majority of them. These anti-constitutional…