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Commitment and Ideology: the Case of the Second Reform Act

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  16 January 2014

Extract

Whatever our differences, I am grateful to F. B. Smith for what must surely be the best academic news of the year: that undergraduates somewhere, if only in Australia, can still find alluring such things as “style and footnote polemic”; our own undergraduates, alas, have headier tastes. In other respects, however, I must confess to finding Mr. Smith's communication disappointing. One of the longer footnotes in my essay in Victorian Minds is a rather detailed critique of his own book, The Making of the Second Reform Bill, a major work on the subject but one that seems to me – and I gave examples of this – to typify at several crucial points the standard “Whig interpretation.” The present discussion would be more fruitful had he addressed himself to those points instead of countering with a critique based on a misunderstanding and misrepresentation of my argument.

The extent of this misrepresentation is exemplified in his opening paragraph. The courteous critic to whom Mr. Smith refers (Robert Kelley) might be discomfited by the suggestion that the “substance” of his quarrel with me concerned my description of Gladstone as a utilitarian. This was only an “example,” as Kelley presented it, of one of his objections; his other objections involved nothing less than my interpretation of half a century of Tory history and of the relationship between intellectual and political history. In my response the issue of utilitarianism occupied one item out of six.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © North American Conference of British Studies 1969

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References

1. Himmelfarb, Gertrude, “Politics and Ideology: The Reform Act of 1867,” Victorian Minds (New York, 1968), p. 366, n. 6Google Scholar.

2. Smith, F. B., The Making of the Second Reform Bill (Cambridge, 1966)Google Scholar.

3. J.B.S., VI (1967), 166Google Scholar.

4. Ibid., VI (1967), 168.

5. Himmelfarb, , Victorian Minds, pp. 333-34, 336, 338, 351Google Scholar.

6. Ibid., p. 342.

7. Monypenny, W. F. and Buckle, G. E., The Life of Benjamin Disraeli (London, 1929), I, 1576Google Scholar.

8. Himmelfarb, , Victorian Minds, pp. 346, 348Google Scholar.

9. Ibid., p. 341, n. 9.

10. Ibid., p. 349.

11. 3 Hansard 185: 937, 938; 186: 25; 187: 1983; 188: 1604, 1609, 1610, 1611, 1614.

12. Ibid. 183: 1909, 1913, 2118, 2120, 891.

13. Himmelfarb, , Victorian Minds, pp. 350–52Google Scholar.