Although the debts to Austen were settled at last, this was far from being the end of Disraeli’s financial distress. For a time he was helped by the solicitor, William Pyne, who performed ‘singular good services’. But by February 1836, the situation had once more become desperate. His creditors were now so clamorous that he was again reluctantly compelled to appeal to his father, to whom he did not care to reveal the full amount of his indebtedness – of which, in any case, he could hazard no more than a rough guess. In a painful interview at Bradenham he ‘ventured to say £2,000 might be required’. But this did not go far. He had to return for more. He was given more. Yet, even so, only the more importunate of the creditors were paid. Other debts still loomed and mounted. He found money, however, to bribe the sheriff’s officer.11
Further debts were blithely contemplated. ‘On Saturday,’ he had written to Pyne in May 1836, ‘the “Carlton Chronicle”, a new weekly journal, will be started. I have been offered & have provisionally accepted half the proprietorship which…will require £500. This speculation may turn out & quickly a considerable property…I think I could scrape enough tog[eth]er. The object is CONSIDERABLE.’12
His debts apparently did not cause Disraeli any excessive worry. It was as though he accepted these as part of the necessary accoutrements of a man of fashion. A character in one of his novels expresses himself as being actually ‘fond of his debts’, one of ‘the two greatest stimulants in the world’, the other being youth. What would he be without them?
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