Xg2 ENGLISH SAGA Disraeli the greatest tragedy that could befall her. "A civilised community must rest on a large realised capital of thought and sentiment; there must be a reserve fond of public morality to draw upon in the exigencies of national life. Society has a soul as well as a body. The traditions of a nation are part of its existence. Its valour and its discipline, its venerable laws, its eloquence and its scholarship are as much portions of its life as its agriculture, its commerce and its engineering skill. ... If it be true . . . that an aristorcacy distinguished merely by wealth must perish from satiety, so I hold it equally true that a people who recognise no higher aim than physical enjoyment must become selfish and enervated. Under such circumstances the supremacy of race which is the key to history will assert itself. Some human progeny, distinguished by their bodily vigour or their masculine intelligence . . . will assert their superiority and conquer a world which deserves to be enslaved. It will then be found that our boasted progress has only been an advancement in a circle, and that our new philosophy has brought us back to" that old serfdom which it has taken ages to extirpate."1 When these prophetic words were spoken sixteen years had still to elapse before Adolf Hitler was born in an obscure town in central Europe. The real wealth of England was the character of her people. To impair it was national suicide. Neither profits nor Utopian theories could ever justify a policy so short-sighted. "A domestic oligarchy under the guise of Liberalism, is denationalising England," Disraeli wrote in 1840, at the outset of his political career: "Hitherto we have been preserved from the effects of the folly of modern legislation by the wisdom of our ancient manners. The national character may yet save the Empire. The national character is more important than the Great Charter or trial by jury.** On the dusty roads from Mons to Marne river, in the blood-stained agony of Somme and Passchendade, on Dunkirk Beach and in the skies above the Channel, the truth of that century-old prediction became dear. It was because her ancient institutions fostered that character ' that Disraeli guarded them so jealously. In an age when thinking Englishman were taught to regard them as anachronisms, a Jew made it his life's work to educate the British people in an under- standing of the true tradition of their country. His success was 1 Mmyfamy & Bwddc, It 487.