Menu
Fri, 19 April 2024

Newsletter sign-up

Subscribe now
The House Live All
Inspiring Inclusion: Delivering on our vision that ‘Everyone is Welcome’ Partner content
Communities
A proud patriot – Christina Georgaki reflects on International Women’s Day Partner content
By Christina Georgaki
Culture
UK advertising announces blockbuster SXSW 2024 programme Partner content
Culture
The UK is lucky to have its international students Partner content
By UCL
Culture
The Government’s new hypothecated tax on independent bookies will mean closed shops and sacked staff Partner content
Health
Press releases
By UK Sport

Mr and Mrs Disraeli: A Strange Romance

University of Exeter

3 min read Partner content

The union of a wealthy older woman who caused offence in polite society and a political nobody who would become one of the foremost politicians of the Victorian age is the subject of a new book.

‘Mr Mrs Disraeli: A Strange Romance’ by University of Exeter English lecturer Dr Daisy Hay, tells the untold story of 19th century Prime Minister Benjamin Disraeli and his wife Mary Anne.

From the outset they made an unlikely couple. Mary Anne was born in Brampford Speke near Exeter. She was the daughter of a sailor, 12 years Disraeli’s senior, and married to someone else when they met.  She was also highly eccentric, rich and embarrassingly overdressed for grand society dinners.  Disraeli was of Jewish decent, a mid-ranking novelist who was mired in debt, and an aspiring Conservative politician. 

Disraeli spent much of his early life on verge of financial ruin, and his marriage to Mary Anne, a well-off widow, caused a scandal.  His debts only finally disappeared when he acquired a rich patron in Torquay, Sarah Brydges Willyams, who the Disraelis visited each Christmas.  On her death she left the couple her house in Mount Braddon along with the rest of her estate, finally solving their money worries.

According to the book, they made perfect targets for the vicious Victorian press and society gossips, yet their odd match appeared to make them impervious to the negativity.  The Disraelis were also good at telling tall tales, and together they spun their unusual tale into a romance worthy of the novels they enjoyed reading.

At the Bodleian Library, Oxford, Dr Hay examined the great cache of their letters and the anecdotes of others; and was able to show how the Disraelis rose to the top of the social and political pile. 

Dr Hay said: “Politicians talking about their private lives are a commonplace in our age. However, long before it became obligatory for aspiring statesmen to be photographed or filmed doing mundane activities, Benjamin Disraeli spun a public fantasy about his private life to win votes.”

She added: “The Disraelis were from unusual backgrounds, and created fantasises about their origins to make themselves more interesting.  Both were born story tellers and as outsiders they knew the importance of image and spin in a world where new money was frowned upon. In an age where first ladies are under ever-increasing pressure to perform and conform, my book offers a portrait of a couple who refused to do either, in a society which demanded you do both.”

The book also explores women of a similar station in life and situation whose endings were far unhappier than Mary Anne’s, whose fairy tale ending of life at 10 Downing Street.

Dr Hay will be interviewed about Mr Mrs Disraeli: A Strange Romance on BBC Radio 3’s Free Thinking programme on Thursday 22 January.

Categories

Culture