Book Read Free

Evelyn Waugh

Page 50

by Philip Eade


  Hillier, Bevis, New Fame, New Love, John Murray, 2002.

  Hillier, Bevis, The Bonus of Laughter, John Murray, 2004.

  Hollis, Christopher, Evelyn Waugh, Longman, 1966.

  Hollis, Christopher, The Seven Ages, Heinemann, 1974.

  Hollis, Christopher, Oxford in the Twenties: Recollections of Five Friends, Heinemann, 1976.

  Holman-Hunt, Diana, My Grandfather, His Wives & Loves, Hamish Hamilton, 1969.

  Holroyd, Michael, Augustus John, Vol. 2, Heinemann, 1975.

  Holroyd, Michael, Bernard Shaw, Vo1.1, Chatto & Windus, 1989.

  Ker, Ian, The Catholic Revival in English Literature, 1845–1961, University of Notre Dame Press, 2003.

  Knox, James, Robert Byron, John Murray, 2003.

  Lancaster, Marie-Jacqueline (ed.), Brian Howard: Portrait of a Failure, Antony Blond, 1968.

  Lees-Milne, James, Ancestral Voices, Chatto & Windus, 1975.

  Lees-Milne, James, Ancient as the Hills: Diaries 1973–1974, John Murray, 1997.

  Lewis, Jeremy, Cyril Connolly, Jonathan Cape, 1997.

  Linck, Charles E., The Development of Evelyn Waugh’s Career, unpublished PhD thesis, 1962.

  Linck, Charles E., Evelyn Waugh in Letters by Terence Greenidge, Cow Hill Press, 1994.

  Longford, Elizabeth, The Pebbled Shore, Weidenfeld & Nicolson, 1986.

  Lovat, Lord, March Past, Weidenfeld & Nicolson, 1978.

  Lycett, Andrew, Ian Fleming, Weidenfeld & Nicolson, 1995.

  Lycett, Andrew, Dylan Thomas: A New Life, Weidenfeld & Nicolson, 2003.

  McCall, Henrietta, The Life of Max Mallowan, British Museum Press, 2001.

  Maclean, Fitzroy, Eastern Approaches, Cape 1949.

  McDonnell, Jacqueline, Waugh on Women, Duckworth, 1986.

  McLaren, Duncan, Evelyn! Rhapsody for an Obsessive Love, Harbour, 2015; see also his website www.evelynwaugh.org.uk

  Mallowan, Max, Mallowan’s Memoirs, Collins, 1977.

  May, Derwent (ed.), Good Talk: An Anthology from BBC Radio, Victor Gollancz, 1968.

  Mead, Richard, Commando General: The Life of Major General Sir Robert Laycock, Pen & Sword, 2016.

  Mitford, Jessica, Hons and Rebels, Victor Gollancz, 1960.

  Mitford, Nancy, A Talent to Annoy: Essays, Articles and Reviews, 1929–1968, Hamish Hamilton, 1986.

  Montagu, Elizabeth, Honourable Rebel, Montagu Ventures, 2003.

  Morriss, Margaret and D. J., Dooley, Evelyn Waugh: A Reference Guide, G. K. Hall & Co, 1984.

  Mosley, Charlotte (ed.), Love from Nancy: The Letters of Nancy Mitford, Hodder & Stoughton, 1993.

  Mosley, Diana, A Life of Contrasts, Hamish Hamilton, 1977.

  Mosley, Diana, Loved Ones, Sidgwick & Jackson, 1977.

  Mosley, Diana, The Pursuit of Laughter, Gibson Square, 2009.

  Mulvagh, Jane, Madresfield: The Real Brideshead, Doubleday, 2008.

  Norwich, John Julius, Trying to Please, Dovecote, 2008.

  Norwich, John Julius, (ed.) Darling Monster: The Letters of Lady Diana Cooper to her son John Julius Norwich, 1939–1962, Chatto & Windus, 2013.

  Ollard, Richard, A Man of Contradictions: A Life of A.L. Rowse, Allen Lane, 1999.

  Ollard, Richard (ed.), The Diaries of A. L. Rowse, 1903–1997, Allen Lane, 2003.

  Owen, James, Commando: Winning WW2 Behind Enemy Lines, Little, Brown, 2012.

  Pakenham, Frank, Born to Believe, Cape, 1953.

  Patey, Douglas Lane, The Life of Evelyn Waugh: A Critical Biography, Blackwell, 1998.

  Powell, Anthony, Infants of the Spring, Heinemann, 1976.

  Powell, Anthony, Messengers of Day, Heinemann, 1978.

  Powell, Anthony, Faces in My Time, Heinemann, 1980.

  Powell, Anthony, The Strangers All Are Gone, Heinemann, 1982.

  Powell, Anthony, Journals 1982–1986, Heinemann, 1995.

  Preston, Paul, We Saw Spain Die: Foreign Correspondents in the Spanish Civil War, Constable, 2008.

  Pryce-Jones, David, Cyril Connolly: Journal and Memoir, Collins, 1983.

  Pryce-Jones, David (ed.), Evelyn Waugh and His World, Weidenfeld & Nicolson, 1973.

  Rothenstein, John, Summer’s Lease: Autobiography 1901–1938, Hamish Hamilton, 1965.

  Ridley, Jane, The Architect and His Wife: A Life of Edwin Lutyens, Chatto & Windus, 2002.

  Rowse, A. L., A Cornishman at Oxford, Jonathan Cape, 1965.

  Rowse, A. L., A Cornishman Abroad, Jonathan Cape, 1976.

  Rowse, A. L., A Man of the Thirties, Jonathan Cape, 1979.

  St John, John, To the War with Waugh, Leo Cooper, 1973.

  Saumarez Smith, John (ed.), The Bookshop at 10 Curzon Street: Letters between Nancy Mitford and Heywood Hill, 1952–1973, Francis Lincoln, 2004.

  Shakespeare, Nicholas, Priscilla: The Hidden Life of an Englishwoman in Wartime France, Harvill Secker, 2013.

  Stannard, Martin, Evelyn Waugh: The Critical Heritage, Routledge & Kegan Paul, 1984.

  Stannard, Martin, Evelyn Waugh: The Early Years 1903–1939, JM Dent & Sons, 1986.

  Stannard, Martin, Evelyn Waugh: No Abiding City 1939–1966, JM Dent & Sons, 1992.

  Stopp, Frederick, Evelyn Waugh: Portrait of an Artist, Chapman & Hall, 1958.

  Taylor, D. J., Bright Young People, Chatto & Windus, 2007.

  Thomas, David N., Dylan Thomas: A Farm, Two Mansions and a Bungalow, Seren, 2000.

  Thompson, Laura, Love in a Cold Climate: Nancy Mitford – A Portrait of a Contradictory Woman, Review, 2003.

  Thwaite, Ann, Glimpses of the Wonderful: The Life of Philip Henry Gosse, Faber & Faber, 2002.

  Thwaite, Ann (ed.), My Oxford, Robson Books, 1977.

  Treglown, Jeremy, Romancing: The Life and Work of Henry Green, Faber & Faber, 2000.

  Sieveking, Paul (ed.), Airborne: Scenes from the Life of Lance Sieveking, Strange Attractor Press, 2013.

  Sinclair, Andrew, Francis Bacon: His Life and Violent Times, Sinclair-Stevenson, 1993.

  Sykes, Christopher, Evelyn Waugh: A Biography, William Collins, 1975.

  Vickers, Hugo, Cecil Beaton, Weidenfeld & Nicolson, 1985.

  Vickers, Hugo, The Unexpurgated Beaton: The Cecil Beaton Diaries as He Wrote Them, Weidenfeld & Nicolson, 2002.

  Waugh, Alec, The Early Years of Alec Waugh, Cassell, 1962.

  Waugh, Alec, My Brother Evelyn & Other Profiles, Cassell, 1967.

  Waugh, Alec, The Fatal Gift, WH Allen, 1973.

  Waugh, Alec, A Year to Remember: A Reminiscence of 1931, WH Allen, 1975.

  Waugh, Alec, The Best Wine Last, WH Allen, 1978.

  Waugh, Alexander, Fathers and Sons: The Autobiography of a Family, Headline, 2004.

  Waugh, Arthur, Alfred Lord Tennyson, William Heineman, 1894.

  Waugh, Arthur, One Man’s Road, Chapman & Hall, 1931.

  Waugh, Auberon, Will This Do? The First Fifty Years of Auberon Waugh: An Autobiography, Century, 1991.

  Westminster, Loelia, Grace and Favour, Weidenfeld & Nicolson, 1961.

  Wheen, Francis, Tom Driberg: His Life and Indiscretions, Chatto & Windus, 1990.

  Williams, Emlyn, George: An Early Autobiography, Hamish Hamilton, 1961.

  Wilson, A. N., Betjeman, Hutchinson, 2006.

  Wilson, John Howard, Evelyn Waugh: A Literary Biography 1903–1924, Associated University Presses, 1996.

  Wilson, John Howard, Evelyn A Literary Biography 1924–1966, Associated University Presses, 2001.

  Wykes, David, Evelyn Waugh: A Literary Life, Macmillan, 1999.

  Ziegler, Philip, Diana Cooper, Hamish Hamilton, 1981.

  Zinovieff, Sofka, The Mad Boy, Lord Berners, My Grandmother and Me, Jonathan Cape, 2014.

  Photographs

  The Waughs in 1890. From left: Elsie, Connie, Dr Alexander Waugh (‘the Brute’), Alick, Annie (Mrs Waugh), Arthur and Trissie.

  The Brute: Annie was terrified lest Arthur’s birth interfere with his first day of partridge-shooting.

  Their house at Midsomer Norton: Evelyn relished its dark hidden corners and assorted interesting sme
lls.

  The Raban family circa 1892, with Arthur and Kate top left.

  Kate and Arthur about to explore the lanes of Buckinghamshire, and (below) posing after their engagement; as Evelyn later saw it, his father was ‘acting all the time’.

  Alec, Arthur and Evelyn, circa 1906.

  Evelyn on the steps of 11 Hillfield Road with his nanny, Lucy Hodges.

  Kate, Arthur, Evelyn, Alec (with cricket bat) and their poodle on holiday at Midsomer Norton, 1904.

  Alec, Kate and Arthur in the garden of the newly built Underhill, 1909.

  Evelyn (second from right) with the Pistol Troop, circa 1910.

  Evelyn, aged eight.

  Evelyn (second top row, third from left) at Heath Mount, with his bête noire Cecil Beaton (same row, third from right).

  Alec, Evelyn, Kate and their poodle in 1912.

  Head’s House during Evelyn’s desolate first year at Lancing, 1917. Evelyn is sitting second from the left on the ground, next to the other ‘new man’, Roger Fulford, far left. The Rev. Bowlby is behind the cup in a dog collar

  Evelyn at Lancing in 1921, at Oxford in 1923 and teaching at Aston Clinton in 1926.

  Evelyn’s first love at Oxford, Richard Pares, seen here in the Alps with Cyril Connolly (wearing beret); Evelyn complained of having been ‘cuckolded by Connolly.’

  Evelyn’s next ‘friend of my heart’ was Alastair Graham (below), pictured here shortly before they met at Oxford, and (right) the photo he sent beckoning Evelyn to ‘come and drink with me somewhere’.

  Lundy Island, Easter 1925: (left to right) Richard, Olivia, Gwen and David Plunket Greene, Terence Greenidge and Elizabeth Russell. Evelyn is seated in foreground.

  On the same Lundy holiday: Olivia Plunket Greene, Patrick Balfour, David Plunket Greene and Matthew Ponsonby.

  Evelyn on his Francis-Barnett motor-bicycle at Aston Clinton in February 1926.

  The Evelyns photographed by Alastair Graham in the garden at Barford, shortly after their engagement in May 1928.

  Their ‘spick and span bandbox of a house’ at 17a Canonbury Square, and (below right) the portrait painted by Henry Lamb for Bryan Guinness – hence the glass of stout – earlier the same year, 1928, shortly after Evelyn had finished Decline and Fall.

  Shevelyn photographed by Sketch at the Guinnesses’ 1860 party in the same costume as she was seen by The Tatler at a later party, lounging on deck in ‘a very amiable position’ with John Heygate.

  The Evelyns at a ‘Tropical’ fancy-dress party during their failed reconciliation-fortnight.

  After the collapse of his marriage, Evelyn sought refuge with Bryan and Diana Guinness, seen here on honeymoon in 1929.

  House party at Pakenham Hall, 1930: Alastair Graham, Evelyn, Elizabeth Harman (later Longford), and, just out of shot with a tennis racket, John Betjeman.

  Evelyn in observation mode at Pool Place, with Rupert Mitford (Nancy’s uncle), Nancy Mitford and Pansy Lamb, 1930.

  Evelyn in Kenya in 1931.

  Alec and Evelyn at Villefranche, South of France, 1931.

  Teresa ‘Baby’ Jungman, whom Evelyn fell deeply in love with in 1930

  Posing with her sister Zita as the Gemini sign of the zodiac.

  Another who eluded his advances was Eileen Agar (above) but more receptive girlfriends included (clockwise from above right) Joyce Fagan, Audrey Lucas, Hazel Lavery and Pixie Marix.

  Evelyn (above) with Sybil Colefax, Phyllis de Janzé and Oliver Messel in 1931.

  Alec Waugh and Joan Chirnside after their engagement in 1932.

  Evelyn, Hamish St Clair Erskine, Coote Lygon and Hubert Duggan at Madresfield, early 1930s.

  Evelyn between Maimie and Coote (in specs) Lygon.

  Evelyn at Captain Hance’s riding academy, labelled by himself.

  Madresfield as it looks today.

  Evelyn is congratulated by his father after winning the Hawthornden Prize in 1936.

  Evelyn with Penelope Betjeman and her horse in the drawing-room at Faringdon House.

  Laura Herbert: ‘I love her very much,’ Evelyn told Baby Jungman, ‘and I think there is as good a chance of our marriage being a success as any I know.’

  Laura’s family home, Pixton Park, whose Irish shabbiness inspired Evelyn’s portrait of Boot Magna Hall in Scoop.

  Evelyn and Laura leaving the church after their wedding in 1936.

  Piers Court in Gloucestershire, a wedding present from Laura’s grandmother.

  Evelyn with the infant Teresa and (right) Laura, at Piers Court shortly before the outbreak of war.

  The drawing room at Piers Court.

  Evelyn in the Royal Marines, with ‘as smart a little moustache as Errol Flynn,’ as Diana Cooper described it.

  Bob Laycock: ‘That every man in arms should wish to be’.

  Evelyn and Randolph Churchill in Croatia, on the British Military Mission to Tito’s partisans.

  Hollywood, 1947: Evelyn and Laura with Sir Charles Mendl and Anna May Wong.

  The Piers Court household, 1947. Middle row, from left: Gladys Attwood (cleaning lady), Hatty, Laura, James, Evelyn, Evelyn’s mother, Meg, and old Mrs Attwood. Teresa and Bron are sitting in the foreground. Directly behind Evelyn stands the butler, Ellwood. Behind Meg is their nanny, Vera, next to the cowman, Norman Attwood.

  Evelyn and Laura returning to Plymouth from New York in the Ile de France, November 1950.

  Evelyn in the library at Combe Florey.

  Combe Florey, 1959. From left: Bron, Meg, Evelyn, Septimus, Teresa, James, Giovanni Manfredi, Hatty, Laura, Maria Manfredi.

  Evelyn at the front of Combe Florey. The sign reads ‘No Admittance on Business’.

  Evelyn, Laura, James and the gardener, Walter Coggan – ‘my rival Coggins’ as Evelyn called him.

  Evelyn and Meg on their trip to British Guiana in 1961.

  Evelyn with Maime Lygon and the newly-married Meg and Giles FitzHerbert.

  Interviewed by John Freeman in the Face to Face television series, June 1960.

  At Combe Florey in 1965. Back row, left to right: James, Bron (holding Alexander and Sophia), Laura, Evelyn, Teresa (with her son Justin), Margaret (with her daughter Claudia). Kneeling in front are Hatty and Septimus, with Emily FitzHerbert in the foreground.

  Index

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

  Abbeyleix, Co. Laois

  Abelson, Tamara (later Talbot Rice)

  Abercromby, Sir Ian

  Abyssinia: EW visits; Italian invasion; oil and mineral rights

  Academy (periodical)

  Academy of Carpentry

  Achnacarry, Highlands

  Acton, Daphne, Lady

  Acton, Sir Harold: appearance and character; background and early life; at Oxford; The Oxford Broom; and EW’s first marriage; novel compared unfavourably to EW’s; EW writes to during Mediterranean cruise; and Diana Guinness; in China; wartime intelligence work; on Brideshead Revisited; EW writes to from United States; in California; in Italy; and EW’s Knox biography; Humdrum,

  Acton, John Lyon-Dalberg-Acton, 3rd Baron

  Addis Ababa

  Adelphi Theatre, London

  Aeolian Hall, London

  African Exploitation and Development Corporation

  Agar, Eileen (later Bard)

  Agate, James

  Aiken, Conrad

  Albee, Edward, Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf

  Aldenham Park, Shropshire

  Alexandria

  Algiers

  All Souls College, Oxford

  ‘American Epoch in the Catholic Church The’ (article)

  Ampleforth Abbey

  Anderson, Robin

  Anglo-Catholicism

  Antigua

  ‘Antony, Who Sought Things That Were Lost’

  Ardingly
College

  Ardrossan, Ayrshire

  Arnold, Matthew

  Arnold House, Denbighshire (prep school)

  Arran, Isle of

  Arts and Crafts movement

  Asquith, Lady Helen

  Asquith, H.H., 1st Earl of Oxford and Asquith

  Asquith, Julian, 2nd Earl of Oxford and

  Asquith (Trim)

  Asquith, Katharine

  Asquith, Raymond

  Assisi

  Aston Clinton, Buckinghamshire: Aston Clinton House (school); The Bell (pub)

  Astor, Nancy, Viscountess

  Athens

  Attlee, Clement (later 1st Earl Attlee)

 

‹ Prev