Superb politician, orator, writer and wit, Benjamin Disraeli was â according to Queen Victoria â âthe kindest Ministerâ she had ever had, who âreached the top of the greasy poleâ [in his own words] despite considerable antisemitism. He enjoyed many scandalous affairs before marrying a widow twelve years older than himself â an extremely eccentric woman to whom he remained deeply and touchingly devoted for the rest of his life.
Disraeli had never intended to be a politician. He had begun his astonishing career by working unenthusiastically in a lawyerâs office; he had tried unsuccessfully to found a newspaper; he had written a novel which lay unproductively in the publisherâs office. A conspicuous dandy, sprightly, attentive and witty, he was attractive to women, enjoying many liaisons until he contracted a venereal disease in a St Jamesâs Street brothel.
He married in 1839. âDizzy married me for my money,â Mary Anne used to say. âBut, if he had the chance again, he would marry me for love.â They lived in a large country house, Hughenden Manor, near High Wycombe, which he bought with mostly borrowed money, and soon became one of the most gifted of parliamentarians and as celebrated as any politician in England. As an antidote to his grief at his wifeâs death in 1872 he threw himself back into the political life, becoming Prime Minister for the second time in 1874, displacing Gladstone much to the Queenâs delight.
Christopher Hibbert was described in the New Statesman as âa pearl of biographersâ, in the Sunday Times as âa gloriously versatile writerâ, and in the TES as âperhaps the most gifted popular historian we haveâ. His many highly acclaimed books include lives of Mussolini, Samuel Johnson, Wellington, Nelson, Queen Victoria and Napoleon; biographies of cities such as London, Rome, Venice and Florence; histories of the Cavaliers and Roundheads and The Great Mutiny, and a social history of the English.