Review: “The Voyage of Captain Popanilla,” a novella by Benjamin Disraeli
This year marks the 200th anniversary of the Panic
of 1825, a financial cataclysm caused in part by rampant speculation in Latin American
stocks that wiped out many people including a young Benjamin Disraeli. In the
three years before the crash, seven nations in South and Central America raised
20 million pounds, of which 19 million of those bonds were in default by 1829. More than 100 British banks closed by the end of 1826, according to recent scholarship (Jackson 2022; see bibliography below). Disraeli
and his trading partners lost thousands of pounds investing in South American mining
companies, a loss which when combined with his losses thereafter on a failed newspaper venture amounts to millions of dollars today. These events left Disraeli
in debt almost to the day he died. He suffered a nervous breakdown after he wrote a sequel to his first novel Vivian Grey, which led him to write a
relatively little-remembered 1828 satirical novella called The Voyage
of Captain Popanilla, which biographer William Monypenny called the
future prime minister’s “first political essay.”
A striking essay it is, using political allegory to lampoon what he viewed as liberal orthodoxies, both anticipating and contradicting some of his later writings. It is a very interesting read, though a review like this one might help for those who aren’t yet familiar with 1820s politics.
The novella, I suspect, was largely inspired by the most spectacular story from the Latin American bubble. A reputed swindler who called himself Gregor MacGregor was arrested in September 1825 for selling government bonds for a fictional land in Central America he called Poyais. He had traveled to an area there and received a land grant from one of the parties that considered themselves a ruling authority. He declared it a new nation, and himself its ruler, and then traveled back to Britain to sell securities in it and tickets to 200 emigrants who subsequently sailed to “Poyais” to make their fortune, only to find there was no such place as Poyais. Fewer than 50 of them made it back to Britain in the end, the rest dying of diseases and conflicts with local natives. Popanilla, which stylistically is inspired by satiric works like Jonathan Swift’s Gulliver’s Travels and Voltaire’s Candide, tells the story of a “savage” named Popanilla from an island country called Fantaisie, which may have been inspired by Poyais. Popanilla in the end is arrested, like Gregor MacGregor, apparently for making up the island in a plot to swindle investors.
Disraeli’s so-called “political trilogy” of Coningsby,
Sybil and Tancred is often considered a beginning
point in the history of the political novel, but as Popanilla shows
Disraeli was not a stranger to political fiction even before those books. His
only completed novel before Popanilla, Vivian Grey, contained
almost no specificity about his political positions. By contrast, Popanilla is
a virtual doctrinaire pamphlet in fictional form.
Perhaps Disraeli began his novella by asking himself the
question, what if Poyais had been a real place? At the beginning of the
novella we are informed by the narrator that Fantaisie is populated by “an
innocent and a happy, though a voluptuous and ignorant race. They have no
manufactures, no commerce, no agriculture, and no printing-presses.” This
state of innocence changes when Popanilla discovers a crate of books from the
Society for the Diffusion of Useful Knowledge (a real organization founded by
Henry Lord Brougham), reads them all, and is converted to Benthamite
Utilitarianism, a liberal creed Disraeli detested and satirizes mercilessly
here. Popanilla comes to believe “that man was not born for himself, but for
society; that the interests of the body are alone to be considered, and not
those of the individual; and that a nation might be extremely happy, extremely
powerful, and extremely rich, although every individual member of it might at
the same time be miserable, dependent, and in debt.” Intoxicated by this new
knowledge, he founds a university on Fantaisie and teaches the young of the
island until the king gets sick of him and puts him in a canoe to discover new
islands and establish relations with them. Popanilla paddles and paddles until
he comes upon a land called Vraibleusia, which is a satirical stand-in for
England. Popanilla is informed Vraibleusia is the richest country in the world,
but that it is deeply in debt.
“‘Debt! I thought you were the
richest nation in the world?’ [says Popanilla.]
‘Tis true; nevertheless, if there were a golden pyramid with a base as
big as the whole earth and an apex touching the heavens, it would not supply us
with sufficient metal to satisfy our creditors.’ [says his Vraibleusian
companion.]
‘But, my dear sir,’ exclaimed the perplexed Popanilla, ‘if this really be true,
how then can you be said to be the richest nation in the world?’
‘It is very simple. The annual interest upon our debt exceeds the whole wealth
of the rest of the world; therefore we must be the richest nation in the
world.’”
Thus Disraeli mocks the liberal nation of England and its
Utilitarian economic philosophers. The Vraibleusians are delighted to discover
in Popanilla a resident of an unknown, undeveloped land they can trade with and
invest in – much like Poyais before 1825. They quickly dispatch a fleet of
ships to bring their goods to Fantaisie to trade. But, like the Poyais bubble,
the Fantaisie bubble bursts when the ships are unable to find any such nation.
This causes a run on the banks, as did the Panic of 1825:
“The whole island was in a state of
the greatest commotion, and that martial law universally prevailed. This
disturbance was occasioned by the return of the expedition destined to the Isle
of Fantaisie. It appeared, from his account, that after sailing about from New
Guinea to New Holland, the expedition had been utterly unable not only to reach
their new customers, but even to obtain the slightest intelligence of their
locality. No such place as Fantaisie was known at Ceylon. Sumatra gave
information equally unsatisfactory.”
In the end, Popanilla is arrested like Gregor MacGregor.
Popanilla is charged with “high treason,” presumably because he is suspected of
having invented his home island of Fantaisie and misled hundreds of Vraibleusians to
try to invest there.
Popanilla shows that Disraeli’s politics changed
in some respects over time. For example, his complex relationship with 19th Century
Britain’s Corn Laws is launched in this story. Here he mocks the laws, which
were tariffs on imported grain attempting to protect local farmers and
therefore local landlords, meaning the country aristocrats who largely composed
the Tory party. In Popanilla, there is only one such farmer, named
The Aboriginal Inhabitant, and he insists that “it was the common law of the
land that the islanders should purchase their corn only of him. They grumbled,
but he growled; he swore that it was the constitution of the country … Thus,
between force, and fear, and flattery, the Vraibleusians paid for their corn
nearly its weight in gold; but what did that signify to a nation with so many
pink shells!”
The Whigs, and eventually moderate Tory Prime Minister
Robert Peel, argued that the Corn Laws raised the cost of bread and other food,
making it harder for the working class to survive. When Peel eventually
repealed the Corn Laws, Disraeli seized on the resulting outrage from
ultra-Tories by campaigning against Peel in the Commons. Peel resigned, and
between that and other issues in Ireland, the Tories were consequently split
and out of power for 30 years. When Disraeli began to come to powerful positions,
however, he did not work to reinstate the Corn Laws, choosing instead to
“educate his party” on the need for an alternative to protectionism, as Peel
failed to do, writes Nicholas Shrimpton in his excellent introduction to
Disraeli’s novel Sybil.
Somewhat defensively, Monypenny (who sometimes seems to have
felt it was his job to defend Disraeli the conservative) wrote:
“Needless … to say, the outlines of
his own philosophy are not yet firmly drawn nor his views on party politics
consistently elaborated. No one therefore need be surprised to find the future
leader of the Protectionists ridiculing the Corn Laws, or the future founder of
Imperialism ridiculing the Colonial system.”
However indicative of Disraeli’s changes of mind, the
novella also predicts positions he would take in later novels and writings. The
prime example is perhaps that the ruler of Vraibleusia is “a colossal and
metallic Statue of extraordinary appearance. It represented an armed monarch.”
That the king of Vraibleusia is a statue constitutes a
criticism of the lack of agency of the British monarchy. In later works
like Coningsby Disraeli lamented that the political system of
his time diminished the power of the British monarchs to the point that he felt
they were expected to behave like Venetian doges, chief magistrates in Vienna
whom Disraeli believed deferred to aristocratic oligarchs rather than ruling on
their own:
“'I repeat it,' said Coningsby.
'The great object of the Whig leaders in England from the first movement under
Hampden to the last most successful one in 1688, was to establish in England a
high aristocratic republic on the model of the Venetian, then the study and
admiration of all speculative politicians. Read Harrington; turn over Algernon
Sydney; then you will see how the minds of the English leaders in the
seventeenth century were saturated with the Venetian type. And they at length
succeeded. William III found them out. He told the Whig leaders, "I will
not be a Doge." He balanced parties; he baffled them as the Puritans
baffled them fifty years before. The reign of Anne was a struggle between the
Venetian and the English systems. Two great Whig nobles, Argyle and Somerset,
worthy of seats in the Council of Ten, forced their Sovereign on her deathbed
to change the ministry. They accomplished their object. They brought in a new
family on their own terms. George I was a Doge; George II was a Doge; they were
what William III, a great man, would not be. George III tried not to be a
Doge, but it was impossible materially to resist the deeply-laid combination.
He might get rid of the Whig magnificoes, but he could not rid himself of the
Venetian constitution. And a Venetian constitution did govern England from the
accession of the House of Hanover until 1832.”
The statue in Popanilla is tended by 12 “managers,” who represent the British cabinet: “They alone were
permitted to hear its voice; for the Statue never spoke in public save on rare
occasions, and its sentences were then really so extremely commonplace that,
had it not been for the deep wisdom of its general conduct, the Vraibleusians
would have been almost tempted to believe that they really might exist without
the services of the capital member.”
The novella includes one digression of a sort we saw the
previous year in his Vivian Grey, in which we find the author in a
silly mood. He writes: “Shortly before Popanilla’s illness he had been
elected a member of the Vraibleusian Horticultural Society, and one evening he
had endeavoured to amuse himself by reading the following CHAPTER ON FRUIT.”
What follows is a long allegorical chapter, as promised, about fruit. Critics
have pointed out the various fruits represent ecclesiastical positions:
Catholics eat pineapple, puritans crab-apple, and so forth.
Not everyone likes Popanilla. In 1990 John Vincent described the novella, “a product of Disraeli’s years of nervous breakdown,” as “a quaint, disrespectful, semi-radical, not very funny or biting satire on British society.” A reviewer at the time the novella came out wrote, "at present we must dismiss it as a jeu d'esprit of considerable merit, though unequal, and not so racy as a Swift of 1828 might have made it." But Gary Dyer in a monograph on British satire describes it as an important work because it appeared as verse and prose satires were disappearing in the 1820s, which he says happened in part because the Panic of 1825 caused publishers to pare back less popular works and therefore the publication of satires like this one. That is apparently one reason Disraeli began writing in the then-more popular genre of "silver fork novels," or stories of aristocratic life, including the next novel he wrote after this one, The Young Duke, which he wrote for financial reasons. When Isaac D'Israeli, his father, heard he'd written a book by that title he is reported to have asked: “What does Ben know of dukes?”
If one is prepared with some familiarity with the
politics of the 1820s, however, Popanilla is quite entertaining and illuminating
as to the mindset of the young Disraeli after the crash of 1825.
---
Select bibliography
Dawson, Frank G. The First Latin American Debt Crisis: The City of London and the 1822-25 Loan Bubble. Yale University Press, 1990.
Dyer, Gary. British Satire and the Politics of Style, 1789-1832. Cambridge University Press, 1997.
Disraeli, Benjamin. Coningsby; or the New Generation, from the Bradenham Edition of the Novels of Disraeli, Peter Davies, 1926.
Disraeli, Benjamin. Popanilla and Other Stories, from The Bradenham Edition of the Novels of Disraeli, Peter Davies, 1926.
Jackson, Trevor. Impunity and Capitalism: The Afterlives of European Financial Crises, 1690-1830. University of Cambridge Press, 2022.
Monypenny, William F. and Buckle, George. The Life of Benjamin Disraeli. MacMillan, 1929.
Shrimpton, Nicholas, ed. The Oxford World Classics edition of Benjamin Disraeli’s Sybil. 2009.
Unknown reviewer. Literary Gazette, No. 594, June 7 1828.
Vincent, John. Disraeli. Oxford University Press, 1990.
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