Book Read Free

Edward VII

Page 29

by Catharine Arnold


  10.  Ibid., p. 148.

  11.  Aronson, op. cit., p. 252.

  12.  Ibid.

  13.  Ibid.

  14.  Ibid.

  15.  Ibid.

  16.  Souhami, op. cit., p. 91.

  17.  Ibid.

  18.  Ibid., pp. 91–92.

  19.  Aronson, op. cit., p. 252.

  20.  Ibid.

  21.  Lamont-Brown, op. cit., p. 150.

  22.  Ibid., p. 151.

  23.  Ibid.

  24.  Ibid.

  25.  Aronson, op. cit., p. 254.

  26.  Ibid.

  27.  Ibid.

  AFTERTHOUGHTS

    1.  Frances, Countess of Warwick, Afterthoughts (London: Cassell, 1931), p. 179.

    2.  Ibid.

    3.  Ibid., p. 180.

    4.  “Burlington Bertie,” a song by Harry B. Norris dating from 1900, was made famous by Vesta Tilley in her heyday as a cross-dressing music hall star.

    5.  Laura Beatty, Lillie Langtry: Manners, Masks and Morals (London: Vintage, 2000), p. 282.

    6.  Ernest Dudley, The Gilded Lily (London: Odhams Press Limited, 1958), pp. 213–4.

    7.  Laura Beatty, op. cit., p. 302.

    8.  Raymond Lamont-Brown, Alice Keppel & Agnes Keyser: Edward VII’s Last Loves (Stroud, UK: Sutton Press, 2005), p. 6.

  BIBLIOGRAPHY

  Anand, Sushila. Daisy: The Life and Loves of the Countess of Warwick. London: Piatkus, 2008.

  Andrews, Allen. The Follies of King Edward VII. London: Lexington, 1975.

  Aronson, Theo. The King in Love: Edward VII’s Mistresses: Lillie Langtry, Daisy Warwick, Alice Keppel and Others. New York: Harper & Row, 1988.

  Attwood, Gertrude M. The Wilsons of Tranby Croft. London: Hutton Press Ltd., 1988.

  Beatty, Laura. Lillie Langtry: Manners, Masks and Morals. London: Vintage, 2000.

  Bentley-Cranch, Dana. Edward VII: Image of an Era. London: Her Majesty’s Stationery Office, 1992.

  Brough, James. The Prince and the Lily. London: Coronet, 1975.

  Cowles, Virginia. Gay Monarch: The Life and Pleasures of Edward VII. London: Harper 1956.

  Dudley, Ernest. The Gilded Lily. London: Odhams Press, 1958.

  Gould, Arthur, and Robert Fizdale. The Divine Sarah: A Life of Sarah Bernhardt. New York: Knopf, 1991.

  Havers, Michael, Edward Grayson, and Peter Shankland. The Royal Baccarat Scandal. London: Souvenir Press, 1988.

  Hibbert, Christopher. Edward VII: A Portrait. London: Allen Lane, 1976.

  Hickman, Katie. Courtesans. London: Harper Perennial, 2003.

  Judd, Denis. Edward VII: A Pictorial Biography. London: Macdonald and Jane’s, 1975.

  Keppel, Sonia. Edwardian Daughter. London: Hamish Hamilton, 1958.

  Lamont-Brown, Raymond. Alice Keppel & Agnes Keyser: Edward VII’s Last Loves. Stroud: Sutton Press, 2005.

  Lang, Theo. My Darling Daisy. London: Michael Joseph, 1966.

  Langtry, Lillie. The Days I Knew: An Autobiography. North Hollywood, Calif.: Panoply Publications, 2005.

  Leslie, Anita. Edwardians in Love. London: Hutchinson, 1972.

  ______. Jennie: The Mother of Winston Churchill. Maidstone, UK: George Mann, 1969.

  ______. The Marlborough House Set. New York: Doubleday, 1973.

  Macqueen-Pope, Walter James. Carriages at Eleven: The Story of the Edwardian Theatre. London: Hutchison, 1947.

  Pearsall, Ronald. Edwardian Life and Leisure. Newton Abbot, UK: David and Charles, 1973.

  Pearson, John. Edward the Rake: An Unwholesome Biography of Edward VII. New York: Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, 1975.

  Richardson, Joanna. The Courtesans: The Demi-Monde in 19th Century France. Edison, N.J.: Castle Books, 2004.

  Ridley, Jane. Bertie: A Life of Edward VII. London: Vintage, 2003.

  Sackville-West, Vita. The Edwardians. London: Virago, 2004.

  Sebba, Anne. Jennie Churchill: Winston’s American Mother. London: John Murray, 2008.

  Souhami, Diana. Mrs. Keppel and Her Daughter. New York: St. Martin’s Press, 1996.

  St. Aubyn, Giles. Edward VII: Prince and King. London: Collins, 1979.

  Trewin, J. C. The Edwardian Theatre. Oxford: Blackwell, 1976.

  Warwick, Countess of, Frances. Afterthoughts. London: Cassell, 1931.

  ______. Life’s Ebb and Flow. New York: William Morrow, 1929.

  INDEX

  The index that appeared in the print version of this title does not match the pages in your e-book. Please use the search function on your e-reading device to search for terms of interest. For your reference, the terms that appear in the print index are listed below.

  Abbey, Henry

  Acton, Harold

  adultery. See also womanizing, Bertie’s

  country house protocol for

  at mistresses’ homes

  Victorian Era acceptance of

  women’s perception and

  Afterthoughts (Warwick)

  Albemarle, 7th Earl of

  Albemarle, Arnold Joost van Keppel, 1st Earl of

  Albemarle, Lady

  Albert, Prince Consort (Bertie’s father)

  Bertie’s marriage and

  death of

  Albert Victor, Prince (Bertie’s son)

  Alexander John, Prince (Bertie’s son)

  Alexander, Tsarevitch

  Alexandra (royal yacht)

  Alexandra “Alix,” Queen of the United Kingdom (formerly Alexandra, Princess of Denmark)

  accession of

  Aylesford scandal and

  Bertie’s death and

  Bertie’s health and

  Bertie’s womanizing and

  children’s births

  Churchill, Jennie, and

  illnesses of

  Keppel, Alice, and

  personality of/perception of

  wedding of

  Alexandrine, Princess of Prussia

  Alfred, Prince (Bertie’s son)

  Alice, Princess (Bertie’s daughter)

  Alington, “Bunny”, 1st Baron

  Alington, Humphrey Sturt, 2nd Baron

  Alistair (piper)

  Almanach de Gotha (royalty listing)

  Anna, Princess of Hesse

  Ariadne, HMS

  Arizona (ocean liner)

  Ascot races

  Asquith, Herbert

  Asquith, Margot

  As You Like It (play)

  Augusta, Princess of Meiningen

  Avory, Horace

  Aylesford, Dowager Lady

  Aylesford, Edith, Countess of

  Aylesford, Heneage “Sporting Joe,” Earl of

  Aylesford scandal

  baccarat

  Baird, George Alexander “the Squire”

  Un Ballo in Maschera (opera)

  Bancroft, Squire

  Barlow, Sir Thomas

  La Barucca. See Pearl, Cora “La Barucca”

  La Barucci. See Benini, Giulia “La Barucci”

  Bathe, Hugo de

  Battle of Hastings

  Beaconsfield, Benjamin Disraeli, Lord

  Beckett, Ernest, 2nd Baron Grimthorpe

  Becket, Thomas a

  La Belle Hélène (opera)

  Bellew, Kyrle

  Belloc, Hilaire

  Benini, Giulia “La Barucci”

  Beresford, Edith

  Beresford, Lady Mina

  Beresford, Lord Charles “Charlie”

  Warwick’s affair with

  Berling, Carl

  Bernhardt, Maurice

  Bernhardt, Sarah

  as Bertie’s mistress

  drug use by

  Langtry’s relationship with

  personality/traits of

  Warwick’s relationship with

  Biarritz, France

  Blandford, Lady Bertha “Goosie”

  Blandford, Lord (later Duke of Marlborough)

 
Blatchford, Robert

  Blenheim Palace

  the Blues (guard regiment)

  Blunt, Wilfrid Scawen

  Boer War

  Second

  Borthwick, Sir Algernon

  Bowles, Camilla Parker

  Bradford Theatre Royal, Manchester

  Broderick, George

  Brooke, Daisy. See Warwick, Frances Greville “Daisy,” Countess of

  Brooke, Lord. See Warwick, Francis Greville “Brookie,” Fifth Earl of

  Brookfield, Charles

  Brooks, Sir William Cunliffe

  Brough, Lionel

  Bruce, Robert

  Buckingham Palace

  balls hosted at

  court presentations at

  Bulow, Countess de

  Bunning, J. B.

  Burgoyne, John

  Burne-Jones, Edward

  Burnham, Lord

  Caesar (Bertie’s dog)

  Cambridge, George, Duke of

  Campbell-Bannerman, Henry

  Canterbury, Archbishop of

  Caracciolo, Duchess di

  Carrington, Lord Charles

  Cassel, Edwina

  Cassel, Mary

  Cassel, Maudie

  Cassel, Sir Ernest

  Catherine of Aragon

  Cavendish-Bentinck, William, Duke of Portland

  Cavendish, Lady

  Cesarevitch, Grand Duchess

  Cesarevitch, Grand Duke

  Le Chabanais, Paris (bordello)

  “Champagne Charlie”

  “The Channel Islands Pirate” (Raoul Le Breton)

  Chaplin, Charlie

  Chaplin, Henry

  Charles II, King of England

  Charles, Prince of Wales

  “Chester, Earl of” (Bertie’s alias)

  Chesterfield, Lord

  Christ Church, Oxford

  Christian, Prince of Schleswig-Holstein-Sonderburg-Glücksburg (later Christian IX of Denmark)

  Churchill, Jeanette “Jennie” (née Jerome)

  Aylesford scandal and

  background of

  Bertie’s relationship with

  children’s births

  marriage of

  ostracism of

  personality traits of

  remarriage by

  Churchill, John “Jack”

  Churchill, Lady Jane (née Conyngham)

  Churchill, Sarah, Duchess of Marlborough

  Churchill, Sir Randolph

  Aylesford scandal and

  Bertie’s wedding and

  children’s births

  death of

  Langtry and

  marriage of

  ostracism of

  in Parliament

  sexuality of

  Churchill, Winston Leonard Spencer-

  birth of

  Clarion newspaper

  Clarke, Sir Edward

  Clarkson, Willy

  Clayton, Oscar

  Clifden, Nellie

  Clumber Stakes

  Coburg, Duke of

  Cole, Lord, Earl of Enniskillen

  Coleridge, Lady

  Coleridge, Lord

  Coleridge, Mrs. Gilbert

  Comédie-Française troop

  Cornwallis-West, George

  Cornwallis-West, Patsy

  country house weekends

  extramarital affairs at

  routine of events in

  seclusion as element of

  Coutts, Baroness Burdett

  Coventry, Earl of

  Cremorne Gardens, London

  Crespigny, Sir Claude Champion de

  Croom, Sir John Halliday

  Cross, Viscount

  Crouch, Eliza. See Pearl, Cora “La Barucca”

  Cubitt, Roland

  Cubitt, Thomas

  the Curragh, Dublin

  Daily Chronicle

  Daily Express

  Daily Mail

  Daily News

  Daisy, Princess of Pless

  “the Deanery,” St. Saviour, Jersey

  de Frece, Sir Walter

  de Frece, Vesta Tilley, Lady

  Delacour, John

  Derby, Lord

  Devonshire, 7th Duke of

  Devonshire, 8th Duke of (earlier Marquis of Hartington)

  Diana, Princess of Wales

  The Dictionary of National Biography

  Disraeli, Benjamin, Lord Beaconsfield

  Aylesford scandal and

  Dixie, Lady Florence (née Douglas)

  Dobby (nurse)

  Dominique (maid)

  Doncaster races

  Doucet, Jacques

  Douglas, “Bosie”

  Downshire, Lady Kitty

  Downshire, Lord

  Draper, Miss (governess)

  Drumlanrig, Lord

  Dudley, Lady

  Dudley, Lord

  Duntreath Castle, Scotland

  Dupplin, Lord

  Easton Lodge, Essex

  country weekends at

  Echo newspaper

  Eden, Anthony

  Edgcombe, Colonel

  Edinburgh, Duchess of

  Edmonstone, 4th Baronet

  Edmonstone, Archie

  Edmonstone of Culloden, Sir William

  Edmonstone of Duntreath, Sir William

  Edwardian Daughter (Keppel)

  Edwardians in Love (Leslie)

  The Edwardians (Sackville-West)

  Edward IV, King of England

  Edward VII, “Bertie,” King of the United Kingdom (formerly Prince of Wales). See also womanizing, Bertie’s

  accession/coronation of

  assassination attempt on

  Aylesford scandal and

  La Barucca as mistress of

  Beresfords’ feud with

  Bernhardt as mistress of

  children’s births

  Churchill as mistress of

  Clifden’s romance with

  Cornwallis-West as mistress of

  death of

  education of

  father’s death

  France visits by

  health of

  illegitimate children rumored of

  India tour of 1875 by

  Keppel as mistress of

  Keyser as mistress of

  Langtry as mistress of

  at military camp

  Mordaunt as mistress of

  mother’s relationship with

  personality/attributes of

  protection personnel of

  Réjane as mistress of

  Schneider as mistress of

  Seillière as mistress of

  stage role played by

  Tempest as mistress of

  Tranby Croft scandal and

  vengefulness of

  Walters as mistress of

  Warwick as mistress of

  wedding of

  Edward VIII, King of the United Kingdom

  Elisabeth, Princess of Wied (later Queen of Romania)

  Elizabeth I, Queen of England

  Era journal

  Errol, Lady

  Esher, Viscount

  Eugénie, Empress of France

  A Fair Encounter (play)

  Falmouth, Viscount

  Faultless’s Pit, London

  Fedora (play)

  Feodorovna, Marie, Tsarina of Russia (formerly Princess Dagmar of Denmark)

  Finch, Heneage “Sporting Joe,” Earl of Aylesford

  Fisher, Lord

  Fitzwilliam, Lord

  France

  Bertie’s trips to Biarritz

  Bertie’s trips to Paris

  Franklin, Sir John

  Frederick VII, King of Denmark

  Frewen, Morton

  Garner, Florence

  Gascoigne, Judge

  George IV, King of the United Kingdom

  George, King of the Hellenes

  George V, King of the United Kingdom (Bertie’s son)

  Gladstone, William

  Glyn, Clayton
>
  Glyn, Elinor

  Gordon-Cumming, Elma

  Gordon-Cumming, Sir William Alexander Gordon

  Gordon-Lennox, Blanchie

  Goschen, George

  Got, Edmond

  La Goulue (dancer)

  Government House, Jersey

  Grain, Mr. (lawyer)

  Grammont-Caderousse, Duc de

  Grenadier Guards

  Greville, Frances. See Warwick, Frances Greville “Daisy,” Countess of

  Greville, Francis. See Warwick, Francis Greville “Brookie,” Fifth Earl of

  Greville, Mrs. Ronnie

  Grey, Lady de

  Grimthorpe, Ernest Beckett, 2nd Baron

  Grosvenor, Lady Constance, Duchess of Westminster

  Gull, William

  Gwyn, Nell

  Hal, Prince (literary character, future Henry V)

  Hambro banking family

  Hamersley, Lily Price

  Hamilton, Duke of

  Hamlet (Shakespeare)

  Hannen, Sir James

  Harbord, Lord Charles, 5th Baron Suffield

  Hardinge of Penshurst, Lord

  Harding, Sir Charles

  Hardwicke, Lord

  Harris, Frank

  Hart, Heber

  Hartington, “Harty-Tarty,” Marquis of (later 8th Duke of Devonshire)

  Hastings, Marquis of

  Hatherley, Lord

  Hawkins, Justice

  Hayes Park Private Asylum, London

  Haymarket Theatre, London

  Hayward, Abraham

  Head, William

  Helena, Princess of the United Kingdom

  Helena, Princess of Waldeck-Pyrmont

  Heller, Stephen

  Helmsley, Viscount

  Henry IV Part One (Shakespeare)

  Henry, Prince of Pless

  Henry VIII, King of England

  Henry V, King of England

  Hilda, Princess of Dessau

  Hildegarde (yacht)

  Hitler, Adolph

  Hodson, Henrietta “Mrs. Labouchere”

  homosexuality

  Hopper, Thomas

  Hotel Bristol, Paris

  Hôtel du Palais, Biarritz

  House of Commons, United Kingdom

  Hunt, William Holman

  Hyde Park, London

  Illustrated London News

  Imperial Theatre, London

  International Exhibition of 1867, Paris

  Ireland

  Churchills exiled to

  famines of 1846-47

  Irving, Henry

  Iveagh, Lord

  James, Venetia

  Jerome, Clara

  Jerome, Clara (younger)

  Jerome, Leonard

  A Jersey Lily (Millais)

  Johnson, Freddie

  Johnstone, Sir Frederick

 

‹ Prev