Tancred (novel)

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Tancred; or, The New Crusade (1847) is a novel by Benjamin Disraeli, first published by Henry Colburn in three volumes. Together with Coningsby (1844) and Sybil (1845) it forms a sequence sometimes called the Young England trilogy. It shares a number of characters with the earlier novels, but unlike them is concerned less with the political and social condition of England than with a religious and even mystical theme: the question of how Judaism and Christianity are to be reconciled, and the Church reborn as a progressive force.[1]

Synopsis[]

Tancred, Lord Montacute, the novel's idealistic young hero, seems destined to live the life of a conventional member of the British ruling class. Dissatisfied with his life in fashionable London circles, he instead leaves his parents and retraces the steps of his Crusader ancestors to the Holy Land, hoping there to "penetrate the great Asian mystery"[2] and understand the roots of Christianity. He meets the beautiful Eva, daughter of a Jewish financier, and becomes involved in the political machinations of her foster-brother, the brilliant Fakredeen, a Lebanese emir. At Fakredeen's instigation Tancred is kidnapped and held captive, but is nevertheless allowed to visit Mount Sinai. He then has a vision of an angel who tells him he must be the prophet of "the sublime and solacing doctrine of theocratic equality",[3] a concept which Disraeli leaves somewhat hazy. Tancred falls ill, and is released at the instigation of Eva, who nurses him back to health. She teaches him about the glories of Mediterranean civilization and the debt that Christianity owes to Judaism. Tancred, in love with Eva and utterly convinced that she is right, proposes marriage, but the romance is broken off when his parents appear to reclaim their son and take him back to England.

Critics noted that the novel's character, Fakredeen revealingly explores Disraeli's real self. They ask if it was coincidental that Tancred's obsession with the East and his crusade to create a new empire foreshadows the imperialism of Disraeli towards India and the Ottoman Empire in the 1870s.[4]

Notes[]

  1. ^ John Sutherland The Stanford Companion to Victorian Fiction (Stanford: Stanford University Press, 1989) p. 619; Andrzej Diniejko "Benjamin Disraeli and the Two Nation Divide" at Victorian Web; Dominic Head (ed.) The Cambridge Guide to Literature in English (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2006) p. 1092; Dinah Birch (ed.) The Oxford Companion to English Literature (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2009) p. 975.
  2. ^ Benjamin Disraeli Venetia; Tancred (London: Frederick Warne, 1866) p. 118.
  3. ^ Benjamin Disraeli Venetia; Tancred (London: Frederick Warne, 1866) p. 205.
  4. ^ J.P. Parry, "Disraeli, the East and religion: Tancred in context." English Historical Review 132.556 (2017): 570-604.

Further reading[]

  • Conary, Jennifer. "'Dreaming Over an Unattainable End': Disraeli's 'Tancred' and the Failure of Reform." Victorian Literature and Culture 38.1 (2010): 75-87 online.
  • Kalmar, Ivan Davidson. "Benjamin Disraeli, romantic orientalist." Comparative studies in society and history 47.2 (2005): 348-371. online
  • Levine, Richard A. "Disraeli's Tancred and 'The Great Asian Mystery'." Nineteenth-Century Fiction 22.1 (1967): 71-85.
  • Parry, J. P. "Disraeli, the East and religion: Tancred in context." English Historical Review 132.556 (2017): 570-604. doi.org/10.1093/ehr/cex138

External links[]


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