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Politics & Power Quote by Benjamin Disraeli

"We live in an age when to be young and to be indifferent can be no longer synonymous. We must prepare for the coming hour. The claims of the Future are represented by suffering millions; and the Youth of a Nation are the trustees of Posterity"

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Disraeli is doing something sly here: he flatters the young into responsibility while yoking them to a moral debt they didn’t choose. “To be young and to be indifferent can be no longer synonymous” sounds like an observation about modern life, but it’s really a command. He’s redefining youth not as a season of experimentation or private ambition, but as a public office. If you are young, you are already enlisted.

The phrase “the coming hour” compresses history into a deadline. It’s rhetoric built for a statesman in a century of churn: industrialization, mass urban poverty, reform agitation, and the steady expansion of political participation. Disraeli, a conservative with a populist streak, understood that the future was arriving whether elites welcomed it or not. So he frames preparedness as civic maturity, not ideological conversion.

Then comes the most strategic turn: “the claims of the Future are represented by suffering millions.” He makes tomorrow speak through today’s misery. It’s a way to dignify social reform without sounding like a radical; alleviating poverty becomes not charity, but stewardship. “Trustees of Posterity” is the clincher, borrowing the language of estates and duty. The subtext is paternalistic but effective: you don’t “own” the future, you manage it on behalf of those who can’t vote yet, those not yet born, those crushed by the present.

Disraeli’s intent isn’t to romanticize youth; it’s to conscript it into nation-building, turning generational energy into political legitimacy.

Quote Details

TopicYouth
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Disraeli on Youth Responsibility and Posterity
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Benjamin Disraeli

Benjamin Disraeli (December 21, 1804 - April 19, 1881) was a Statesman from United Kingdom.

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