Pages: 392 (Paperback) ISBN: 0753801469 Pub: Weidenfeld & Nicholson history Pub date: 1998-05-11 Amazon.co.uk Sales Rank: 536978
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Reader Reviews:Not a man but a mannerism? (1/1 people found this helpful)Balfour, as historians and biographers are quick to point out, defies easy categorisation. This is perhaps the only definite conclusion that can be drawn about the man. In many respects he is the personification of the Hegelian notion of synthesis that so fascinated him; philosopher and politician, pragmatist and Zionist, ferocious partisan and detached observer, poor prime minister and exceptional elder statesman.
Balfour by Max Egremont (14/15 people found this helpful)Arthur James Balfour in the early 1900s suffered much the same fate as John Major was to endure in the mid-1990s, and for much the same reasons. Both Prime Ministers assumed office from predecessors - from Salisbury in 1902, from Thatcher in 1990 - who had set the tone of British politics for the previous decade, and both led the Tories into electoral disaster. Balfour's true calling, like Major's, was to be a first-rate civil servant but he was instead a third-rate Prime Minister. His genius was for assimilating great volumes of information and drawing it out into a choice of policy options; but, like Major, when called upon to make a policy choice that would alienate colleagues with larger personalities than his own, he could not, and so made certain the party schism that he was so eager to avoid. Balfour's dilemma was with Joseph Chamberlain's aggressive calls for Tariff Reform, a question of Britain's relations with the outside world which prefigured John Major's travails with his Euro-Sceptics of ninety years later. Max Egremont's life of Balfour, first published in 1980, is alive with characters who create themselves through the correspondence and diaries on which the biographer draws heavily and satisfyingly. At times Balfour's story reads like an Evelyn Waugh novel as we become acquainted with the bright young things of his age - the glittering Ladies Elcho and Desborough, the prickly, brilliant Curzon, the doomed romantic George Wyndham (whose career in Government is ruined by his careless filing of letters from his Under-Secretary at the Irish Office), and the hero's lost love, May Lyttelton, whose death from typhoid in 1875, we are invited to suppose, diverts the young Balfour into public life. With the qualified exception of Lloyd George, it is only on the penultimate of Egremont's 340 pages that we meet anybody of humble birth, as Macdonald's Chancellor, the Ickhornshaw-born Philip Snowden, shuffles into Balfour's presence as he lays dying in 1930. In these more innocent times, there could be no surer path to high office than to have a friend or relative who happened to be Prime Minister. Balfour, Salisbury's nephew, knew this for himself, and after he had succeeded his uncle room in the government was found for his cousin Lord Cranborne and his own brother Gerald. The hapless Wyndham, brother of Lady Elcho, likewise benefited of Balfour's long and somewhat ambiguous friendship with his sister. This was government by a Set. By insistent use of extracts from the letters passed between the members of Balfour's circle, Egremont attempts to create for us Balfour as his admirers saw him. And how they admired him: he is "alarming and formidable", "the heart that to all hearts is nearest", and in his dotage (but still in office under Baldwin) "the most distinguished figure in the world". As judged by the historical record, Balfour does not shine nearly as brightly: apart from the 1906 election debacle, his name is associated with the Dardanelles adventure and the Admiralty's strategy drift early in the Great War; with coercion in Ireland; with the attempt through the League of Nations to bring peace to Europe after Versailles - and above all with Zionism, and with the Constitutional crisis that followed Lloyd George's progressive Budget of 1909. It is a political life distinguished by good intentions (if by anything), more than by achievement. Max Egremont was just thirty-two when this book was first published. Although plainly another of Balfour's admirers, he has furnished us with an absorbing picture of a strange figure who lived in interesting times but was often dwarfed by them. Similar ProductsBalfour: The Last Grandee Salisbury: Victorian Titan (Phoenix Press) CategoriesAmazon.co.uk places this book into the following categories:
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