Online Read Free Novel
  • Home
  • Romance & Love
  • Fantasy
  • Science Fiction
  • Mystery & Detective
  • Thrillers & Crime
  • Actions & Adventure
  • History & Fiction
  • Horror
  • Western
  • Humor

    Darling Pol

    Page 27
    Prev Next

    Grant, Mrs, 34, 34n, 38, 41, 52, 53, 54, 57, 67, 76, 78, 91, 96, 168, 260

      Green, C. P. ‘Paddy’, 21, 21n, 26, 34, 37, 105

      Greene, Elena (née Lindeman), 174, 174n

      Greene, Felix, 173, 173n

      Greene, Graham, xxiii, 108n, 116n, 225n, 260; A Burnt-Out Case, 277, 277n

      Grenfell, Alice, xix, 21, 21n, 76n, 102, 229n

      Grimond, Jo, 210, 244

      Grimond, Laura (née Bonham-Carter), 211

      Grisewood, Harman, 213, 213n

      Grundgens, Gustav, 137, 137n

      Hahn, Kurt, 176n, 178, 257

      Haley, Sir William, 230, 230n, 265

      Hambourg, Michal, 66, 67

      Hamburg, Germany, 136, 173

      Hamilton, Adam, 115

      Hamilton, Joan, 113, 114

      Hanbury-Williams, John, 88, 92

      Handley, Sir Michael, 171, 171n

      Harcourt-Smith, Simon, 33, 232

      Harris, Frank, My Life and Loves (1922), 288, 288n

      Harris, Rolf, 206n

      Hastings, Maurice, 125

      Haw Haw, Lord see Joyce, William

      Heber-Percy, Jennifer (née Fry), 76, 76n

      Helman, Adrian, 17

      Hepburn, Olive, 207, 209

      Hess, Myra, 120 Hibbert, Susan, 205

      Hill, Paul, 8, 8n, 96, 96n, 97, 126, 207n, 228n

      Hitler, Adolf, 61n, 62

      Hong Kong, 170–171, 172

      Houseman, Jack, 12, 12n, 15, 237, 238

      Howes, Ted, 135

      Hughes, Alwyn, 206, 206n

      Hughes, Glyn, 159, 205, 206, 209, 210, 217

      Hume, Benita, xxiii, 47

      Huxley, Aldous, 45, 52

      Ingrams, Leonard, 87, 87n, 88

      Ismay, Hastings Ismay, 1st Baron, 153n

      ‘Jacko case’, 197, 211

      James, Elizabeth, 124, 125

      Jardine Matheson (company), 174

      Joffre, Joseph (‘Papa’), Marshall of France, xxii

      John, Betty, 35, 35n

      John, Edwin, 37, 75n

      John, Gwen, 35, 35n, 37

      John, Otto, 178, 178n, 197

      John Augustus, 35, 35n

      Jones, Phyllis, 276, 281, 282n, 289

      Joyce, William (‘Lord Haw Haw’), 74, 74n

      Kavanagh, Ted, 212, 212n

      Kempson, Rachel, 147n

      Keswick, Lady Clare (née Elwes), 175, 175n

      Keswick, Sir John, 175, 175n

      Keynes, John Maynard, xxii, 53n

      Kingsmill Lunn, Hugh, 101–102, 105

      Kinross, Patrick Balfour, 3rd Baron, 123

      Kirkpatrick, Sir Ivone, 181, 181n, 271, 271n

      Knight, Laura, xix

      Knox, Ronald, 263, 263n, 265

      Korda, Alexander, xxiii

      Krauss, Clemens, 183

      Kung, Hans, 284, 284n

      Lawrence, Geoffrey, 161n

      Le Clerc, Nina, 107

      League of Nations, 68

      Lee, Raymond, xxi, 37n

      Lindsay-Hogg, Sir Anthony, 40, 40n

      Livingstone, Richard, 202, 202n

      Lloyd George, Frances, Countess (née Stevenson), 166

      London Dockers’ strike (1945), 95n

      Londonderry, Alistair Vane-Tempest-Stewart, 9th Marquess, 255

      Lopton, Langton, 221

      Luchaire, Corinne, 116, 116n

      Mabane, Sir William, 163, 163n

      Macartney, ‘Trix’, 75n

      Macdonald, Iverach, 220

      Mangan, Fr Richard, 193, 196, 197, 199, 201, 205, 207, 235, 265, 268

      Manila, Philippines, 171

      Mann, Erika, 137

      Manstein, Erich von, 178, 178n

      Masaryk, Jan, 107, 107n, 124

      Maxwell Fyfe, Sir David, 255n

      McDougall, Jack, 120

      Melikoff, Boris, 37, 37n, 166

      Mental Deficiency Act (1927), 211

      Menuhin, Yehudi, 107

      Meunier, Philippe, 247–248, 249, 253, 253n

      Micklem, Nat, 194, 194n, 200, 210–211, 212, 217, 244, 270, 271

      Millerick, Father, 218, 242, 257, 273

      Mirsky, Vera T., The Cup of Astonishment, 22

      Mitchell, Miss, 113, 154

      Mitford, Nancy, 40, 82–83; The Pursuit of Love, 40n

      Monck, Henry, 6th Viscount Monck, 153n, 168

      Montagu, Edward Douglas-Scott-Montagu, 3rd Baron, 255, 255n

      Montagu-Pollock, John, 75, 75n

      Moorehead, Alan, 136, 141

      Morris, Claud, 7, 7n, 8, 28, 51–52, 79

      Morse, Sir Arthur, 170

      Mosaddeq, Mohammad, 180, 180n, 181

      Mosbacher, Eric, 225, 225n

      Moscow Nights (film,1935), xxiii

      Muggeridge, Kitty, 130

      Muggeridge, Malcolm, 16, 16n, 88, 101, 102, 105, 130, 224, 239, 266, 266n

      Munnings, Alfred, xix

      Murray, Basil, xxiii

      Mussolini, Benito, 61n

      Myers, John, 100

      Mynors, Humphrey, 100, 100n

      Mynors, Roger, 100n

      Naguib, Mohamed, 188–189, 188n

      Nasser, Colonel Gamal Abdel, 188n

      Newton, Ann (née Maclean), 5, 28, 68

      Newton, Robert, xxi–xxii, 4n, 11–12, 28, 227n

      Nichols, Beverley, 126

      Nicolson, Harold, 181

      Niemoller, Martin, 198, 198n

      Norman, Montagu, 53n, 181, 181n

      Obemer, Nesta, 173–174

      Observer (newspaper), 146

      Oliver, Nora, 86

      Olivier, Laurence, xxiii, 147, 147n, 213

      Orwell, George, 148, 148n

      Owen, Frank, 244

      Paris, France, 11, 36

      Parker, Michael, 176, 177, 182

      Parkinson’s disease, 286

      Paul VI, Pope, 285

      Paynter, Betty, xix, xxi, 5n, 14, 21, 28, 29, 83, 83n, 91, 96, 207n, 225, 227n, 228n; and daughter Sonya, xix, 218, 219–220, 221, 224, 226, 228

      Paynter, Colonel Camborne, xix, 6, 22, 34, 46, 53, 54, 59, 62, 66, 68, 80, 102, 104

      Paynter, Sonya, xix, 68, 83, 84, 212, 220–224, 226–228, 228n, 230

      Paynter, Tom, 78, 227, 233

      Peakswater, Cornwall, 119, 129

      Pebble (MW’s dog), 114, 115, 127, 160, 233

      Petacci, Clara, 61n, 62

      Pétain, Marshall, 31, 65, 66

      Philby, Kim, 171n

      Phillipson, Lydia, 67

      Pius XII, Pope, 277n

      Platts-Mills, John, 204, 204n, 211

      Portal, Sir Francis, 153, 153n, 162

      Portals (company), 151, 152, 152n

      Potsdam Conference (1945), 121

      Prittie, Terence, 142

      Purvis, Chester, 89

      Quarr Abbey, 83n, 250, 261, 265

      Quennell, Peter, 22, 83, 86, 88, 114, 168, 168n

      Razmara, Ali, 169, 169n

      Rickatson-Hatt, Bernard, 88, 88n, 92, 147, 151, 162

      Rigg, Diana, 287, 287n

      Ritz Hotel, London, xv, xxvi Robbins, Harold, The Adventurers (1966), 288, 288n

      Roberts, Bechhofer, Verlaine, 106, 108

      Robertson, Sir Malcolm, 33, 33n, 35

      Robeson, Paul, 12, 15

      Rodd, Peter, xxiii, 40n, 155n, 260

      Roosevelt, Franklin D., 53

      Roussin, André, Une Grande Fille Tout Simple, 36

      Ruegg, Ann, 200, 241

      Russell, Victor, 48

      Rutherford, Edwin, 131, 131n, 161, 209

      Ryan, Desmond, 86

      Sandberg, Christina, 96, 96n, 98

      Sandberg, Penelope, 158

      Schacht, Biene, 204, 204n, 219, 221, 222, 224, 226, 228, 230, 231, 233, 236–243, 246–250, 252, 260, 263, 264

      Schacht, Dr Hjalmar, 173, 173n, 176, 178, 180–184, 204n, 208, 236, 261, 264, 266, 271, 273–275

      Schumacher, Kurt, 177, 177n

      Sellon, Hugh, 66

      Shackleton, Edith, 61–62, 61n, 66, 67, 70, 98

      Sharp, Margery, The Loving Eye, 212

      Sheffield, J. V., 153n

      Shishakli, Adib, 188n


      Siepmann, Charles, 65, 65n, 182, 184, 235, 235n

      Siepmann, Dietelinde, 137, 173, 184

      Siepmann, Eric: background and education, xxi–xxiii; car accident, 285; conversion to Catholicism, 193, 196; death, 290; divorce from Phyllis Morris, 30, 44, 48, 118, 140, 159–165, 168–170; finances, 30, 44, 46, 47, 58, 59–60, 75–76, 94–95, 98, 163, 243; job as Berlin correspondent for Sunday Times, 130; job with British European Airways, 117; job with Kemsley Press news agency, 140; job with Portals, 151–155; job with The Times, 193, 234, 236; literary career, xxiii–xxiv, 19, 40, 46, 70, 151, 162, 193, 202, 203, 208, 214; loses job with MOI, 72; loses job with Portals, 190; marries MW, 170; meets MW, xv, xxv, xxvi– xxvii; takes overdose, 278; wartime career, xxii; Confessions of a Nihilist, 193

      Siepmann, Harry, 53, 53n, 63, 71, 77, 82, 88, 100, 104, 116, 131, 146, 147, 151, 155–156, 155n, 181, 215, 283

      Siepmann, Ingeborg, 177, 182

      Siepmann, Janey, 235

      Siepmann, Otto, xxii–xxiii, 118, 286–287

      Siepmann, Phyllis (née Morris), xxiv, 5n, 44n, 84, 90n, 161, 165; campaign against ES and MW, 113, 116–118, 116n, 129, 144, 144n, 146

      Siepmann, Ricardo, 137–139, 137n, 182, 184

      Siepmann, William (‘Bill’), 188, 196, 229, 229n, 251, 261, 284, 288

      Spark, Muriel, 281

      Spencer, Raine, Countess, 37n

      St Aubyn, Violet, 174

      St Levan, Sam, 104

      Stalin, Josef, 121

      Stanley, Edward, 83, 83n

      Stanley, Sylvia, 83n

      Stauffenberg, Colonel Claus von, 272, 272n

      Stoeckle, Gert, 248–249, 250

      Stopford, Richmond, xv, 131, 131n, 171, 172

      Strauss, Dr Eric, 116n, 197, 200

      Stucley, Betty, 218, 219, 246

      Sunday Times (newspaper), 130, 140, 142, 146

      Sutherland, Claire, Duchess of (née O’Brien), 37, 37n, 45, 46n, 50

      Sutherland, George (‘Geordie’) Sutherland, 5th Duke of, 37–38, 39, 42, 45, 50, 64

      Sweeney, Charles, 83, 83n

      Sweeney, Margaret, 83n

      Swinfen, Averil, Lady (née Knowles), 254, 254n, 257, 257n, 267

      Swinfen, Carol Swinfen Eady, 2nd Baron, xvi, 13n, 14, 23, 42, 104, 113, 116, 117, 118, 167, 210; divorce from MW, 48, 51, 53, 55n; financial support for MW, 120, 120n, 145, 145n; and Toby Eady, xxi, 4n, 128, 254, 257n, 267–268

      Swinfen, Roger Swinfen Eady, 3rd Baron: childhood at Boskenna, 9–10, 21, 35, 56, 68, 92, 102; education, 157, 166–167; joins Royal Scots regiment, 257, 257n; at Sandhurst, 196, 227; at Thornworthy, 252, 253, 259, 264–265, 266–267, 271–272

      Tennant, David, 86

      The Prince and the Showgirl (film, 1957), 213, 213n, 214

      Thomas, Michael, 177–178, 177n

      Thornworthy (house in Dartmoor), 193, 204n, 276

      Tito, Josip Broz, 163, 164

      Toynbee, Philip, 22

      Triolet, Elsa, 31, 31n

      Trott, Adam, 185

      True (MW’s dog), 22, 22n, 55, 104, 109, 114, 281, 285

      Trundle, Guy, 48, 48n, 51

      United Nations (UN), 68n

      Varwell, Miss, 196, 202

      Victoria, Queen, xvii–xviii

      Victory celebrations, May 1945, 64–68

      Virgil, Georgics, 16, 35

      Waller, Lady, 200, 222, 233, 241, 245

      Warburg, Eric, 177, 177n, 178

      Warburg, George, 265

      Warburg’s (bank), 254, 259, 259n, 260

      Wates, Erik, 174–175

      Waugh, Alec, 125

      Waugh, Evelyn, xxiii, 198n, 276n; The Loved One, 125

      Webb, Norman, 157, 209, 212

      Week, The (political newsletter), 225, 225n

      Wesley, Mary: abortion, 91, 93;

      background and family, xvi, xvii– xvix; ‘black market scandal’, xx; changes her name to Siepmann, 104n; conversion to Catholicism, 193, 196; divorce from Carol Swinfen, xxi, 4, 4n, 14, 33, 51, 53–56, 64; and her children, 9, 10, 14, 21, 49, 76, 79, 92, 96, 97, 100, 102, 262, 267, 272; initiates ‘Jacko case,’ 197, 211; introduced to Boskenna, xix–xx; marries Eric Siepmann, 170; meets Eric Siepmann, xv, xxv, xxvi–xxvii; plans to start cheese making business, 151; relationship with Heinz Ziegler, xvi–xvii, xx; takes in language students, 214; war work, xvi; The Camomile Lawn (1984), 20n, 66n, 292; A Dubious Legacy (1992), 20n, 25n; The Fruits of My Follies, 269n; The Glass Bugle (unpublished), 32n, 115n, 117; Jumping the Queue (1983), 292; Part of the Furniture (1997), 292; The Sixth Seal, 290; Speaking Terms (1969), 156n, 290

      West, Morris, The Shoes of the Fisherman, 283n

      Whitcombe, Dr, 146, 165

      White, Antonia, xxiii, 90, 92, 193, 225, 239, 260, 274

      Williams, Vicky, 66

      Wodehouse, P. G., 16n

      Wonnacott, Mrs, 195, 195n, 215, 216, 265

      Woodruff, Douglas, 198, 198n, 214, 217, 260, 265

      Wyszynski, Cardinal Stefan, 217, 217n

      Yeats, W. B., 61n, 62, 70

      Young, Courtney, 171, 171n

      Ziegler, Heinz, xiv, xviii, 4n, 107n, 268n, 278

      Ziegler, Paul, 83, 83n, 84, 95, 177, 254, 257, 261n, 265, 268

      Zilliacus, Konni, 163, 163n, 164

      @vintagebooks

      penguin.co.uk/vintage

      This ebook is copyright material and must not be copied, reproduced, transferred, distributed, leased, licensed or publicly performed or used in any way except as specifically permitted in writing by the publishers, as allowed under the terms and conditions under which it was purchased or as strictly permitted by applicable copyright law. Any unauthorized distribution or use of this text may be a direct infringement of the author’s and publisher’s rights and those responsible may be liable in law accordingly.

      Epub ISBN: 9781473546127

      Version 1.0

      1 3 5 7 9 10 8 6 4 2

      VINTAGE

      20 Vauxhall Bridge Road,

      London SW1V 2SA

      Vintage is part of the Penguin Random House group of companies whose addresses can be found at global.penguinrandomhouse.com

      Letters © Estates of Mary and Eric Siepmann

      Editorial material © Patrick Marnham

      Patrick Marnham has asserted his right to be identified as the author of this Work in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988

      First published by Harvill Secker in 2017

      penguin.co.uk/vintage

      A CIP catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library

      ISBN 9781911215103

      Introduction

      fn1 Evelyn Waugh made Peter Rodd and Basil Murray the models for the character of Basil Seal in Black Mischief.

      fn2 Maurice Bowra was later warden of Wadham College, Oxford.

      fn3 Ronald Colman, athletic British heart-throb and Oscar-winning movie star of the 1930s and 40s.

      fn4 Richard Crossman, a millionaire farmer and socialist, later a prominent minister in the 1960s Labour government.

      Part 1

      fn1 Mary and her husband Carol, Lord Swinfen, had spent the war apart. In 1941 Mary gave birth to Toby, her son by Heinz Ziegler. Carol acknowledged the boy as his own and saw no reason why he and Mary should divorce. But Mary wanted a new life and in 1943 asked Carol to divorce her for desertion, which he reluctantly agreed to do.

      fn2 Pauline Gates, sister of the actor Robert Newton, had introduced Eric and Mary four days earlier, in the Palm Court of the Ritz Hotel. Her husband, Sylvester Gates, a fellow scholar with Eric at Winchester, was now a barrister. He would later become chairman of the British Film Institute.

      fn3 Eric was due to take up the post in France, working with a Psychological Warfare Unit under the control of the wartime Ministry of Information. France was still a war zone, under military control and partly under German occupation. Eric had suggested that Mary should join him as his secretary.

      fn4 Betty Paynter, daughter of Colonel Camborne Paynter, Mary’s wartime host at Boskenna.

      fn5 Ann Newton was the
    former Annie Maclean, second wife of Robert Newton.

      fn6 In 1941, just before being posted to North Africa with the Royal Marines, Eric had contracted a wartime marriage with a woman he hardly knew called Phyllis Morris. After meeting Mary he decided to divorce Phyllis, who was still posted abroad on war duties.

      fn7 Nevil Alexander Beechman MC MP, wounded nine times at Passchendaele serving with the King’s Royal Rifle Corps, a friend of Colonel Paynter and National Liberal MP for St Ives, the local constituency.

      fn8 Louis Aragon, the French philosopher poet, a leading intellectual of the day, had become an icon of the post-liberation Resistance. Mary had made a translation of ‘Elsa Before Her Mirror’, which the poet had dedicated to his communist muse and wife, Elsa Triolet.

      fn9 Claud Morris, a farmworker who had become a dashing young man in the district. He was later a successful, radical publisher. No relation to Phyllis.

      fn10 Dennis Bradley was one of Mary’s admirers. On returning from the war in the summer of 1944, and while staying at Boskenna, he had proposed to her – although she was at that time still the undivorced wife of Lord Swinfen.

      fn11 It Depends What You Mean by James Bridie, the play Mary had been to see on 26 October, the evening they first met.

      fn12 Betty Paynter was having an affair with Claud Morris, as well as with a local solicitor Paul Hill. Morris was also involved with a young lady named Joy.

      fn13 Frederick, 2nd Baron Carnock – brother of the author Harold Nicolson.

      fn14 All military correspondence with England was sent by Diplomatic Bag.

      fn15 Her real brother, Robert Newton.

      fn16 Jack Houseman, British-American actor, attended Clifton College with Eric in 1915.

      fn17 Sylvester Gates had begun to suspect that his wife was having an affair.

      fn18 Hugh Farmar married Constantia Rumbold, daughter of Sir Horace, 9th Baronet and anti-Nazi ambassador in Berlin. The ceremony took place in the Grosvenor Chapel. Mary’s sense of isolation was sharpened by her brother’s decision to ask Carol Swinfen to be his best man.

      fn19 Mary’s sister, Susan, was a war widow.

      fn20 Malcolm Muggeridge, later a celebrated journalist and editor of Punch, was a wartime MI6 officer who had been posted to Paris to investigate whether or not P. G. Wodehouse should be charged with treason. As a result of his report Wodehouse was cleared.

      fn21 Duff Cooper, wartime minister of information and confidant of Churchill’s, had taken up a new appointment as British Ambassador in Paris.

      fn22 French socialist and journalist who liaised between General de Gaulle and the BBC during the war.

     


    Prev Next
Online Read Free Novel Copyright 2016 - 2026