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Constructing George Wyndham: Narratives of Aristocratic Masculinity in Fin-de-Siècle England
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 10 January 2014
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In June 1913, on a holiday trip to Paris, George Wyndham died suddenly of a heart attack—he was not quite fifty years old. Shocked by this unexpected loss, colleagues in the Conservative Party and the House of Commons, whose inner circles he had occupied for a quarter of a century, organized the usual tributes. Obituaries laid out Wyndham's pedigree as scion of one of England's more romantic landed families, charted his meteoric rise in the 1890s under Arthur Balfour's patronage, referred briefly and discreetly to his troubled tenure as Irish secretary from 1900–1905, and applauded his versatility as a sportsman and a man of letters. Despite his truncated career, interest in Wyndham did not wane after these first homages. Working through the interruption of war, his family saw that collections of letters and essays, with the 1925 set prefaced by J. W. Mackail's “life,” reached the public. These materials prompted pen portraits and biographies that appeared at regular intervals into the 1970s.
A largely sympathetic group of authors, those who wrote about Wyndham faced the interesting challenge of presenting as inspiring and exemplary a life whose disappointments had threatened to outweigh its achievements. The solution they found was one that Wyndham would have accepted, for, indeed, he helped to shape it. In their hands, George Wyndham became a modern Siegfried, the charming, versatile, and disinterested son of an extraordinary ruling class—now, alas, eclipsed—who had guided Britain through two centuries of unprecedented grandeur and prosperity.
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References
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32 GW to Grosvenor, 15 July 1902, 25 July 1910, 2 April 1911, all in GP.
33 Madeline Wyndham's scrapbooks are at Stanway House. Her letters to George in the Grosvenor Papers capture the urgency and expectation, as well as the sentiment, in their relationship: “My own own darling Child, Boy, Man, Angel of Love and help … I give thanks to God that you were born and now many are glad that you were born” (29 August 1900). And, “[now] when you most may want your full and glorious strength, and health, and nerve, and power, of which you have more than any other of your compeers, of which nature has given you so abundantly and so much more than to any other man not one of them can come near you and you have got it all … the country will want you, must have you God made you for it don't fail him—be true to yourself. There is not a man in the whole government who can hold a candle to you for all that is needed for a statesman!” (8 October 1905).
34 GW to Mary Elcho, 16 October 1898, EP. Contemporaries believed that Madeline pressured her daughter Mary, already in love with Balfour, into an unhappy marriage with the heir to the earl of Wemyss; see Blunt Papers, Fitzwilliam Museum, Cambridge, 34–1975, p. 17; and Maude Wyndham to Ettie Desborough: “Her mother pushed her into marrying Lord Elcho—so one used to be told at least” (3 March 1944, DP).
35 John Tosh makes clear how important it would have been for educated Victorian men who worked at home—many professionals, clergy, and landowners—to have a clear patriarchal authority in the household (“Domesticity and Manliness in the Victorian Middle Class,” in Roper, and Tosh, , eds., Manful Assertions, pp. 48–51Google Scholar).
36 Poem fragment in Wyndham's hand (GP): “I have been lonely all my life / I feel this though I know not why. A wife / and Child were surely mine, and surely / friends too I had.”
37 J. S. Sandars to Arthur Balfour, 5 March 1905, EP.
38 Alfred Lyttelton to Mary Gladstone Drew, 31 December 1886, Mary Gladstone Papers, BL, Add. MS. 46234; duke of Westminster to Grosvenor, 19 October 1886, GP. One of the stories Wyndham apparently told later, to gain sympathy from female friends, was of the “older” woman who had “snatched” the unsuspecting youth; see Betty Ponsonby to Ettie Grenfell, 16 January 1893, DP.
39 Paget, Lady Augusta, In My Tower, 2 vols. (London, 1924), 2:275Google Scholar. Wyndham was deeply in love and reverential: “The Higher Devotion which you feel for Him and tried to describe, is that which I feel for you. I can't help feeling more strongly for you than anything or even for Religion” (GW to Grosvenor, September 1886, GP). After her marriage, Sibell kept the name Lady Grosvenor because of her status as mother to the duke of Westminster's heir.
40 Wyndham's description of the typical English wife, in the draft of a “Toast to Literature” given at a dinner honoring Anthony Hope in 1910, GP.
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70 Mary Elcho to GW, 19 October 1898, GP. Max Egremont gives a summary of Wyndham's qualities, including his manner of speaking, at the time he first took ministerial office in 1898 (The Cousins, pp. 194–99).
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77 GW to Grosvenor, 26 and 28 January, 19 March, 29 April 1897, all in GP. See the report of Wyndham's toast at the Imperial South Africa Association meeting, in which he said that the association was founded twelve years ago “in a room of his own house by five gentlemen—one of whom only he would name—Dr. Jameson”; see The Times (22 May 1908).
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82 Collini reports that John Morley was impatient with the “unintellectual ‘sound man’ held up as the model public figure” (Public Moralists, p. 103).
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85 The fullest account is Jackson, The Ulster Party, chap. 6. See also Shannon, Catherine, Arthur J. Balfour and Ireland, 1874–1922 (Washington, D.C., 1988), pp. 112–35Google Scholar; O'Halpin, , The Decline of the Union, pp. 39–51Google Scholar.
86 Jackson reviews this assertion in detail in The Ulster Party, pp. 253–60. It is his view that Wyndham's family destroyed his political papers to conceal his involvements with Dunraven's plan.
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88 “The whole submelody which runs through everything is Melancholy, Humour, false Hilarity, elemental passions, elemental thought, nobility of soul etc. etc. etc. blending into a wailing dirge”; see Adelson, Roger, Mark Sykes (London, 1975), p. 97Google Scholar.
89 George Wyndham, speech to the Primrose League, quoted in The Times (21 November 1907). The ideas of the Tariff Reformers, Diehards, and “constructive imperialists” with whom Wyndham identified are well presented in Philips, Gregory, The Diehards: Aristocratic Society and Politics in Edwardian England (Cambridge, Mass., 1979)Google Scholar; Sykes, Alan, Tariff Reform in British Politics, 1903–1913 (Oxford, 1979)Google Scholar; Green, E. H. H., The Crisis of Conservatism: The Politics, Economics and Ideology of the British Conservative Party, 1880–1914 (London, 1995)Google Scholar. See also Thompson, J. A., “George Wyndham: Toryism and Imperialism,” in Edwardian Conservatism, ed. Thompson, J. A. and Mejia, Arthur (London, 1988), pp. 105–28Google Scholar.
90 Quoted in a letter from Grosvenor to Blunt, 10 August 1913, Blunt Papers, Fitzwilliam Museum, Cambridge.
91 Jackson, , The Ulster Party, p. 283Google Scholar. J. S. Sandars thought Wyndham a spent force after 1906; see his Studies of Yesterday (London, 1928), p. 56Google Scholar.
92 GW to Grosvenor, 14 July, 1909, GP. Alan Sykes considers Wyndham one of three or four leaders of the Conservative right wing; see his “The Radical Right and the Crisis of Conservatism before the First World War,” Historical Journal 26 (1983): 664Google Scholar.
93 Although the Conservative chief whip found him a dilatory attender to Commons business, Wyndham carried an extremely heavy speaking schedule outside Parliament, e.g., he gave twenty-six speeches in a seven-week period in 1907. Besides helping to organize the Diehards and the Halsbury Club, he instigated two national fund-raising campaigns for the Tariff Reform League in 1912, and he wrote the preface to the official handbook distributed to Unionist party workers; see Vincent, John, ed., The Crawford Papers (Dover, N.H., 1984), p. 314Google Scholar; Amery, , My Political Life, 2:413Google Scholar; Garvin, and Amery, , Joseph Chamberlain, 6:977Google Scholar; Begge, Lilian Mary, ed., The Unionist Worker's Handbook (London, 1912)Google Scholar.
94 Jackson, , The Ulster Party, p. 283Google Scholar.
95 GW to Grosvenor, 21 September 1907, GP; George Wyndham, speech given at Hexham, , quoted in The Times (25 October 1907)Google Scholar. Contrast this with a statement given by Blunt regarding Wyndham in 1901: “His theory of politics is that a politician should ‘play the game,’ and that he owes no duty except to his party” (My Diaries, 2:7Google Scholar).
96 Egremont, , The Cousins, p. 254Google Scholar.
97 GW to Grosvenor, 2 February 1906, 12 July 1909, 2 November 1911, GP. But note that Blunt has Wyndham presenting the Diehard revolt against Balfour and Lansdowne as a “conspiracy” (My Diaries, 2:356Google Scholar).
98 See Adams for this interpretation of anti-Semitism as fear that the Jew's “selfmastery confirms [his] capacity for political domination” (Dandies and Desert Saints, p. 132). In a letter to Belloc, Wyndham fumed that “the Jew takes on Europe and children of the Church, our Mother, who has made us men …. We needn't damn them. They were born damned and unfruitful: just sterilities” (Wyndham, , ed., Letters of George Wyndham, 2:520Google Scholar). Geoffrey Searle notes that Wyndham joined a campaign to investigate the “radical plutocrats” in the Liberal party; see his Corruption in British Politics, 1895–1903 (Oxford, 1987), p. 139Google Scholar.
99 GW to Grosvenor, 12 September 1906, GP. References to “little,” “base” people occur also in letters of 28 July 1902 and 16 October 1906 from GW to Grosvenor, GP. For the tones of lofty dismissiveness, see Mackail, and Wyndham, , eds., Life and Letters, 2:622–24Google Scholar.
100 Wyndham, , Essays in Romantic Literature, p. 145Google Scholar; Collini, , Public Moralists, pp. 186–87Google Scholar. For the “functional” man, see Gatty, , Recognita, pp. 43, 115, 119, 160Google Scholar.
101 GW to Grosvenor, 16 May 1907, GP; also 6 June 1906: “I was really meant to be a cavalry leader and not a politician. It amuses me so much and I exert such an influence without any effort.”
102 Clarke, Norma, “Strenuous Idleness: Thomas Carlyle and the Man of Letters as Hero,” in Roper, and Tosh, , eds., Manful Assertions, p. 38Google Scholar; Collini, , Public Moralists, pp. 134–35Google Scholar.
103 Mackail, and Wyndham, , eds., Life and Utters, 2:587, 695Google Scholar; GW to Elcho, 21 December 1907, EP.
104 Mackail, and Wyndham, , eds., Life and Letters, 2:540Google Scholar, 537.
105 Ibid., 2:539; Hearn, , Men in the Public Eye, pp. 128–29Google Scholar.
106 Adams, , Dandies and Desert Saints, pp. 26–27Google Scholar.
107 GW to Grosvenor, 12 July 1909, GP; Mackail, and Wyndham, , eds., Life and Letters, 2:628Google Scholar.
108 GW to Grosvenor, 12 August 1911, GP. See also Ward, , Men and Matters, pp. 100, 102Google Scholar; Gatty, , Recognita, p. 145Google Scholar.
109 GW to Grosvenor, 21 January 1906, 15 June 1910, GP.
110 Mackail, and Wyndham, , eds., Life and Letters, 2:733Google Scholar; Leverenz, David, “The Last Real Man in America: From Natty Bumppo to Batman,” in Fictions of Masculinity: Crossing Cultures, Crossing Sexualities, ed. Murphy, Peter F. (New York, 1994), pp. 21–53Google Scholar.
111 Adonis, , Making Aristocracy Work, pp. 269–73Google Scholar.
112 Mackail, and Wyndham, , eds., Life and Letters, 2:729Google Scholar.
113 Egremont, , The Cousins, p. 25Google Scholar; GW to Grosvenor, 21 September 1907, GP.
114 Eliot, T. S., The Sacred Grove (London, 1920), pp. 24–32Google Scholar. “And good riddance,” Virginia Woolf would have added: “I read Wilfrid Blunt (diaries) at breakfast; I don't like aristocratic writing, do you? I don't like the Souls; I don't like George Wyndham”; see The Letters of Virginia Woolf, ed. Nicolson, Nigel and Trautmann, Joanne, 5 vols. (New York, 1976), 2:390Google Scholar.
115 Wyndham, , Essays in Romantic Literature, p. 163Google Scholar.
116 Greenblatt, Stephen, Renaissance Self-Fashioning from More to Shakespeare (Chicago, 1980), p. 6Google Scholar.
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