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Nancy Mitford

Nancy Freeman-Mitford CBE (28 November 1904 – 30 June 1973), known as Nancy Mitford,[n 1] was an English novelist, biographer, and journalist. The eldest of the Mitford sisters, she was regarded as one of the "bright young things" on the London social scene in the inter-war period. She wrote several novels about upper-class life in England and France, and is considered a sharp and often provocative wit. She also has a reputation as a writer of popular historical biographies.


Nancy Mitford

BornNancy Freeman-Mitford
(1904-11-28)28 November 1904
London, England
Died30 June 1973(1973-06-30) (aged 68)
Versailles, France
OccupationNovelist, biographer
Notable worksThe Pursuit of Love
Love in a Cold Climate
Noblesse Oblige (ed.)
Spouse
(m. 1933; div. 1957)
ParentsDavid Freeman-Mitford, 2nd Baron Redesdale (father)
Sydney Bowles (mother)
RelativesMitford family

Mitford enjoyed a privileged childhood as the eldest daughter of the Hon. David Freeman-Mitford, later 2nd Baron Redesdale. Educated privately, she had no training as a writer before publishing her first novel in 1931. This early effort and the three that followed it created little stir. Her two semi-autobiographical post-war novels, The Pursuit of Love (1945) and Love in a Cold Climate (1949), established her reputation.

Mitford's marriage to Peter Rodd (1933) proved unsatisfactory to both, and they divorced in 1957 after a lengthy separation. During the Second World War she formed a liaison with a Free French officer, Gaston Palewski, who was the love of her life. After the war Mitford settled in France and lived there until her death, maintaining contact with her many English friends through letters and regular visits.

During the 1950s Mitford developed the concept of "U" (upper) and "non-U" language, whereby social origins and standing were identified by words used in everyday speech. She had intended this as a joke, but many took it seriously, and Mitford was considered an authority on manners and breeding.

Her later years were bittersweet, the success of her biographical studies of Madame de Pompadour, Voltaire and King Louis XIV contrasting with the ultimate failure of her relationship with Palewski. From the late 1960s her health deteriorated, and she endured several years of painful illness before her death in 1973.

Family

 
"Bertie" Mitford, created Baron Redesdale in 1902

The Mitford family dates from the Norman era, when Sir John de Mitford held the Castle of Mitford in Northumberland. A later Sir John held several important public offices during the late 14th and early 15th centuries, and the family maintained a tradition of public service for many generations.[3] In the 18th century William Mitford was a leading classical historian, responsible for the definitive history of ancient Greece.[4][5] His great-grandson Algernon Bertram Mitford, born in 1837 and known as "Bertie", was a diplomat and traveller who held minor office in Disraeli's second ministry, from 1874 to 1880.[6] In 1874 he married Clementina, the second daughter of David Ogilvy, 10th Earl of Airlie, a union that linked the Mitfords to some of Britain's most prominent aristocratic families.[7] Blanche Ogilvy, Clementina's elder sister, became the wife of Sir Henry Montague Hozier, a soldier turned businessman. Their four children included daughters Clementine ("Clemmie"), who in 1908 married the future British Prime Minister Winston Churchill, and Nellie, who married Bertram Romilly. Both Hozier and Blanche were promiscuous, and it is generally accepted by historians and family members that Hozier was not Clemmie's father although he was registered as such.[8] Blanche told her friend Lady Londonderry, shortly before Clemmie's birth, that the father of the expected child was her own brother-in-law, Bertie Mitford.[9] Most historians believe that other candidates for the paternity are more likely.[n 2]

Bertie Mitford's marriage produced five sons and four daughters. His career in government service ended in 1886 when, after the death of a cousin, he inherited a considerable fortune. A condition of the inheritance was that he adopt the surname "Freeman-Mitford". He rebuilt Batsford House in Gloucestershire, the family's country seat, served briefly as a Unionist MP in the 1890s and otherwise devoted himself to books, writings and travel. In 1902, he was raised to the peerage as 1st Baron Redesdale, a re-creation of a title that had previously been held in the family but had lapsed in 1886.[11][n 3]

Selective Mitford family tree

 
Chart showing some of the connections of the Mitford family, through marriages, to other leading families, including the Russells (dukes of Bedford),[14] the Churchills (dukes of Marlborough) and, via Princess Alexandra, the British Royal Family.[15] Deborah Mitford married Andrew Cavendish, who became the 11th Duke of Devonshire.[16]

Childhood

Parentage

Nancy Mitford's father, David Bertram Ogilvy Freeman-Mitford, was Bertie Mitford's second son, born on 13 March 1878. After several years as a tea planter in Ceylon he fought in the Boer War of 1899–1902 and was severely wounded.[17] In 1903 he became engaged to Sydney Bowles, the elder daughter of Thomas Gibson Bowles, known as "Tap", a journalist, editor and magazine proprietor whose publications included Vanity Fair and The Lady.[18] The couple were married on 16 February 1904, after which they rented a house in Graham Street in West London.[19] Bowles provided his son-in-law with a job, as business manager of The Lady magazine. David had little interest in reading and knew nothing of business; thus, according to Nancy Mitford's biographer Selina Hastings, "a less congenial post ... could hardly have been imagined".[20] He remained in this position for 10 years.[21] The couple's first child, a daughter, was born on 28 November 1904; they had intended to call her Ruby, but after she was born they changed their minds and named her Nancy.[22]

First years

Responsibility for Nancy's day-to-day upbringing was delegated to her nanny and nursemaid, within the framework of Sydney's short-lived belief that children should never be corrected or be spoken to in anger. Before this experiment was discontinued, Nancy had become self-centred and uncontrollable; Hastings writes that her first years were "characterised by roaring, red-faced rages".[23] Just before her third birthday, a sister, Pamela, was born; the nanny's apparent change of loyalty in favour of the new arrival was a further source of outrage to Nancy, and throughout their childhood and into young adulthood she continued to vent her displeasure on her sister.[24]

In January 1909 a brother, Tom was born, and in June 1910 another sister, Diana, followed.[24] That summer, to relieve the pressure on what was becoming an overcrowded nursery, Nancy attended the nearby Francis Holland School. The few months she spent there represented almost the whole of her formal schooling; in the autumn the family moved to a larger house in Victoria Road, Kensington, after which Nancy was educated at home by successive governesses.[25] Summers were spent at the family's cottage near High Wycombe, in Buckinghamshire, or with the children's Redesdale grandparents at Batsford Park.[26] In the winter of 1913–14 David and Sydney visited Canada, prospecting for gold on a claim that David had purchased in Swastika, Ontario. It was here that their fifth child was conceived, a daughter born in London on 8 August 1914 and christened Unity.[27]

War, Batsford Park and Asthall Manor

On the outbreak of the First World War on 4 August 1914, David re-joined his regiment and was soon in France. In May 1915, Clement, David's older brother, was killed while serving with the 10th Royal Hussars,[28] which made David heir to the Redesdale title and lands. On 17 August 1916 Bertie Mitford died; David, still serving at the front, became the 2nd Baron Redesdale. Sydney quickly took possession of Batsford House, much of which had been shut up for many years, and occupied the portion of it that she could afford to heat. The children had the run of the house and grounds, and were taught together in the schoolroom. This was a source of frustration for Nancy, whose lively intelligence required greater stimulus. She spent many hours reading in the Batsford House library where, according to Hastings, the foundations of her intellectual life were laid.[29]

 
Asthall Manor, the Mitford family home between 1919 and 1926

The Redesdale estates were extensive, but uneconomical. At the end of the war Redesdale decided to sell Batsford Park and move his increasing family (a fifth daughter, Jessica, had been born in September 1917) to less extravagant accommodation.[n 4] The house was sold early in 1919, together with much of its contents—including, to Nancy's great dismay, a large part of its library.[29] The new family home was Asthall Manor, a Jacobean mansion near Swinbrook in Oxfordshire. This was intended as a short-term measure while a new house was built on land nearby.[31] The family stayed in Asthall Manor for seven years, and it became the basis of many of the family scenes which Nancy was later to portray in her semi-autobiographical novels.[25][32]

Growing up proved a difficult process for Nancy. Unable to form a relationship with Pamela, the sister nearest to her in age, she was bored and irritated by her younger siblings, and vented her feelings by teasing and tormenting them.[33] Although there was undoubtedly cruelty in her taunting—the other children, led by Tom, formed a "Leag (sic) against Nancy"[34]—her teasing was also, according to the later reflections of her nephew Alexander Mosley: "a highly-honed weapon to keep a lot of highly competitive, bright, energetic sisters in order. She used it ... as a form of self protection".[35] Not all her interactions with her siblings were hostile; for their amusement she edited and produced a magazine, The Boiler, to which she contributed entertainingly gruesome murder stories.[36]

In 1921, after years of pleading for proper schooling, Nancy was allowed a year's boarding at Hatherop Castle, an informal private establishment for young ladies of good family. Laura Thompson, in her biography of Nancy, describes Hatherop as not so much a school, "more a chaste foretaste of debutante life".[37] Here Nancy learned French and other subjects, played organised games and joined a Girl Guide troop. It was her first extended experience of life away from home, and she enjoyed it.[36] The following year she was allowed to accompany four other girls on a cultural trip to Paris, Florence and Venice; her letters home are full of expressions of wonder at the sights and treasures: "I had no idea I was so fond of pictures ... if only I had a room of my own I would make it a regular picture gallery".[38]

Debutante and socialite

Nancy's eighteenth birthday in November 1922 was the occasion for a grand "coming-out" ball, which marked the beginning of her entry into Society. That was followed in June 1923 by her presentation at Court, a formal introduction to King George V at Buckingham Palace, after which she was officially "out" and could attend the balls and parties that constituted the London Season. She spent much of the next few years in a round of social events, making new friends and mixing with the "Bright Young People" of 1920s London.[39] Nancy declared that "we hardly saw the light of day, except at dawn".[40] In 1926 Asthall Manor was finally sold. While the new house at Swinbrook was made ready, the female members of the family were sent for three months to Paris, a period which, says Hastings, began Nancy's "lifelong love affair" with France.[41]

Among Nancy's new London friends was Evelyn Gardner who,[42] Nancy informed her brother Tom, was engaged "to a man called Evelyn Waugh who writes, I believe, very well".[43] She and Waugh later developed a lasting friendship.[44] Although she was now of age, her father maintained an aggressive hostility towards most of her male friends, particularly since, as Hastings remarks, these tended towards the frivolous, the aesthetic and the effeminate. Among them was Hamish St Clair Erskine, the second son of the 5th Earl of Rosslyn, an Oxford undergraduate four years Nancy's junior. He was, according to Hastings, the least suitable partner of all, "the most shimmering and narcissistic of all the beautiful butterflies"—and the one most likely to offend Lord Redesdale.[45] The pair met in 1928 and became unofficially engaged, despite his homosexuality (of which Nancy may not have been aware).[46] Against a backdrop of negativity from family and friends—Waugh advised her to "dress better and catch a better man"[47]—the engagement endured sporadically for several years.[25]

Incipient writer

As a means of augmenting the meagre allowance provided by her father, Mitford began writing, encouraged by Waugh. Her first efforts, anonymous contributions to gossip columns in society magazines, led to occasional signed articles,[48] and in 1930 The Lady engaged her to write a regular column.[49] That winter, she embarked on a full-length novel, Highland Fling, in which various characters—mostly identifiable among her friends, acquaintances and family—attend a Scottish house-party which develops chaotically.[50][51] The book made little impact when it was published in March 1931, and she immediately began work on another, Christmas Pudding, illustrated by her close friend Mark Ogilvie-Grant. Like the earlier novel, the plot centres on a clash between the "Bright Young People" and the older generation. Hamish Erskine is clearly identifiable in the character of "Bobby Bobbin", and John Betjeman is the basis for the supporting role of Bobby's tutor.[52] The thinly disguised caricatures pervading the book shocked Lady Redesdale, who thought it could not possibly be published under Mitford's own name.[53]

The affair between Erskine and Mitford continued intermittently.[53] While she often despaired of the relationship, she refused other offers of marriage, saying that she would "never marry anyone except Hamish."[54] In 1932 her plight was overshadowed by a family scandal involving her younger sister Diana, who had married Bryan Guinness in 1928 and was the mother of two young sons. In 1932 Diana deserted her husband to become the mistress of Sir Oswald Mosley, the leader of the British Union of Fascists, himself married with three children. Almost alone of her family, Mitford offered her sister support, regularly visiting her and keeping her up to date with family news and social gossip.[55] Her own love affair with Erskine came to an abrupt end when, in June 1933, he informed her that he intended to marry the daughter of a London banker.[56] In a final letter after their parting, Mitford wrote to him: "I thought in your soul you loved me & that in the end we should have children & look back on life together when we are old".[57][58]

Marriage, writing and politics

 
Strand-on-the-Green, seen from Kew Bridge

Within a month of Erskine's departure, Mitford announced her engagement to Peter Rodd,[58] the second son of Sir Rennell Rodd, a diplomat and politician who was ennobled that year as Baron Rennell.[59] According to Mitford's friend Harold Acton, Rodd was "a young man of boundless promise ... he had abundant qualifications for success in any profession he deigned to choose".[60] Other biographers describe him as irresponsible, unfaithful, a bore and unable to hold down a regular job,[25] and as the model for Waugh's unscrupulous, amoral character Basil Seal from Black Mischief.[61] They were married on 4 December 1933, after which they settled into a cottage at Strand-on-the-Green on the western edges of London. Mitford's initial delight in the marriage was soon tempered by money worries, Rodd's fecklessness and her dislike of his family.[62]

In 1934, Mitford began her third novel, Wigs on the Green, a satire on Sir Oswald Mosley's fascist "Blackshirt" movement. Mitford herself had briefly flirted with Mosley's New Party in 1931, although her enthusiasm was short-lived, and she soon became a vociferous opponent of the British Union of Fascists and of fascism.[63] When the novel was published in 1935, its book cover illustrated by Bip Pares,[64] it made little critical impact and seriously offended members of her own family, particularly her sisters Diana and Unity, both of whom were supporters of Mosley's movement and devotees of the German dictator Adolf Hitler.[25] Diana eventually forgave Nancy, but Nancy's rift with Unity, who was outraged by her depiction in the book as the ridiculous "Eugenia Malmains", was never fully healed.[65]

By 1936, Nancy Mitford's marriage was largely a sham. Rodd was engaged in an affair with the wife of a friend, a situation that continued into the new year, when the Mitford family was further shaken by the 19-year-old Jessica's elopement with her cousin Esmond Romilly.[66][n 5] A rebellious ex-Wellington schoolboy and avowed Communist, Romilly fought on the Republican side in the Spanish Civil War.[69] The young couple were traced to Bilbao, and Nancy was despatched to bring them home but failed to persuade them, and Jessica and Esmond were married in May 1937.[70]

Through the winter of 1937–1938, Mitford's main literary task was editing the letters of her cousins the Stanleys of Alderley, with whom she was connected through her great-grandmother Blanche Airlie.[70] Her preoccupation with the project, nine or ten hours a day, she informed her friend Robert Byron, further damaged her relationship with Rodd, who resented the time thus spent.[71] Nevertheless, in the summer of 1938, she discovered that she was pregnant. She hoped for a girl: "2 Peter Rodds in 1 house is unthinkable", but in September, she miscarried.[72] Early in 1939, Rodd left for southern France to work with the relief organisations assisting the thousands of Spanish refugees who had fled from General Franco's armies in the final stages of the civil war. In May, Mitford joined him and spent several weeks there as a relief worker.[73] She was much affected by what she saw: "I have never cried so much in all my life".[74] The experience hardened her antifascism to the extent that she wrote: "I would join hands with the devil himself to stop any further extension of the disease".[75]

Having rejected the political extremes within her family, Nancy Mitford was a moderate socialist,[76] but some of her works, such as her introductions to the Stanley letter collections, and her "U–non-U" essay of 1955, are staunch defences of the aristocratic traditions and values that she grew up with.[77]

Second World War

The outbreak of war in September 1939 divided the Mitford family. Nancy and Rodd supported the Allies in the war. The Romillys had by this time departed for America,[n 6] but the others either hoped for an Anglo-German détente or, as with Unity, were openly pro-Nazi.[78] Unity was in Munich when war was declared. In despair, she attempted suicide by shooting herself in the head. She survived, and was sent home through neutral Switzerland.[79][n 7] Mosley and Diana, who had married secretly in 1936, were detained under Defence Regulation 18B.[80] Nancy, in full antifascist mode, had described her sister to the British Intelligence agency MI5 as "a ruthless and shrewd egotist, a devoted fascist and admirer of Hitler [who] sincerely desires the downfall of England and democracy in general".[81][n 8] During the "Phoney War" of 1939–1940, Nancy was briefly an Air Raid Precautions (ARP) driver, and later worked shifts at a first-aid post in Paddington.[84] She drew on those experiences in her fourth novel, Pigeon Pie, a comedy about spying. It was published by Hamish Hamilton in May 1940, while there was little public appetite for lighthearted war satire, and the book was a commercial failure.[85]

 
Commemorative plaque at the entrance to the Heywood Hill bookshop, Curzon Street

In April 1940, Mitford suffered her second miscarriage. Shortly afterward, Rodd, who had been commissioned into the Welsh Guards, departed overseas.[86] Alone in London, Mitford moved to the family's Rutland Gate house where she remained during the London Blitz. The main house had been requisitioned to provide a refuge for Jewish families evacuated from the bombed areas of the East End. Mitford spent much of her time looking after those families: "so hard-working, clean and grateful".[87] A brief affair with a Free French officer, André Roy, resulted in a third pregnancy. Mitford again miscarried, with complications that led, in November 1941, to a hysterectomy.[88] After convalescence, at loose ends, she began working as an assistant at the Heywood Hill bookshop in Curzon Street.[n 9] The shop became the centre of Mitford's daily activities and was a favoured meeting place for London's literati.[90] In September 1942, she met Gaston Palewski, a French colonel attached to General Charles de Gaulle's London staff. She found him fascinating, and he became the love of her life though her feelings were never fully reciprocated. He was an inspiration for much of her future writing. For the sake of Mitford's reputation, the affair was pursued with discretion before Palewski left for Algeria in May 1943. Thereafter, the relationship was conducted mainly by letters and occasional phone calls since Palewski was only intermittently in England before the end of the war.[91]

The failure of Pigeon Pie had cooled Mitford's desire to write, but in 1944, with Waugh's encouragement, she began planning a new novel. In March 1945, she was given three months' leave from the shop to write it.[92] The Pursuit of Love is a heavily autobiographical romantic comedy in which many of her family and acquaintances appear in thin disguises.[93] Despite the distraction of learning that her brother Tom had died fighting in Burma,[94][n 10] she finished the book and, in September, went to Paris. Ostensibly, that was to establish a French branch of Heywood Hill, but in reality, she wished to be close to Palewski, who was now a member of de Gaulle's postwar provisional government.[95] She was back in London in December 1945 for the publication of The Pursuit of Love which was, Hastings records, "an instant and phenomenal success ... the perfect antidote to the long war years of hardship and austerity, providing the undernourished public with its favourite ingredients: love, childhood and the English upper classes".[93] The book sold 200,000 copies within a year of publication, and firmly established Mitford as a best-selling author.[96]

Move to Paris

At the end of the war, Rodd returned home, but the marriage was essentially over. Although remaining on friendly terms, the couple led separate lives.[97][n 11] Mitford's visit to France in late 1945 had revived her longing to be there, and in April 1946, having given up working in the shop the previous month, she left London to make her permanent home in Paris and never lived in England again.[97] She was a prolific letter writer and kept contact with her large cohort of friends by a voluminous correspondence. According to Hastings, she developed many of her friendships far further on paper than she could have done through normal social intercourse.[99]

Rue Monsieur

"I am so completely happy here ... I feel a totally different person as if I had come out of a coal mine into daylight ... Diana Cooper is being too angelic. I am captivated completely by her beauty and charm ... Oh my passion for the French!"

Nancy Mitford, writing to her mother after deciding to live permanently in France.[100] l

During her first 18 months in Paris, Mitford lived in several short-term lodgings while she enjoyed a hectic social life, the hub of which was the British Embassy under the regime of the ambassador, Duff Cooper, and his socialite wife, Lady Diana Cooper.[99] Eventually Mitford found a comfortable apartment, with a maid, at No. 7 rue Monsieur on the Left Bank, close to Palewski's residence.[101] Settled there in comfort, she established a pattern to her life that she mostly followed for the next 20 years, her precise timetable being determined by Palewski's varying availability. Her socialising, entertaining and working were interspersed with regular short visits to family and friends in England and summers generally spent in Venice.[25][102]

In 1948, Mitford completed a new novel, a sequel to The Pursuit of Love that she called Love in a Cold Climate, with the same country house ambience as the earlier book and many of the same characters. The novel's reception was even warmer than that of its predecessor. Waugh was one of the few critics to qualify his praise; he thought that the descriptions were good but the conversations poor.[103][104] In 1950 she translated and adapted André Roussin's play La petite hutte ("The Little Hut"), in preparation for its successful West End début in August,[105] The Times's critic noted the "habit of speech at once colloquial and unexpected which instantly declares itself the creation of Miss Mitford."[106] The play ran for 1,261 performances, and provided Mitford with a steady £300 per month in royalties.[105] The same year The Sunday Times asked her to contribute a regular column, which she did for four years.[107] The busy period in her writing life continued in 1951 with her third postwar novel, The Blessing, another semi-autobiographical romance this time set in Paris, in which an aristocratic young Englishwoman is married to a libidinous French marquis. Harold Acton deems it her most accomplished novel, "permeated with her joyous love of France".[108] This time Waugh (to whom the book was dedicated) had no criticism; he found the book "admirable, deliciously funny, consistent and complete, by far the best of your writings".[109]

Mitford then began her first serious non-fiction work, a biography of Madame de Pompadour. The general view of the critics when the book was published in March 1954 was that it was "marvelous entertainment, if hardly to be taken as history".[110] The historian AJP Taylor likened Mitford's evocation of 18th-century Versailles to "Alconleigh", the fictitious country house that formed the background to her recent best-selling novels, a comparison that she found offensive.[111][112]

Noblesse Oblige

 
Mitford in 1956

In 1954 Alan Ross, a University of Birmingham professor of linguistics, devised the terms "U" and "Non-U" to differentiate the speech patterns of the social classes in England. "U" indicated upper-class usage, and "Non-U" the conventions of the lower strata of society.[113] His article, in a learned Finnish journal and with an illustrative glossary, used The Pursuit of Love to exemplify upper-class speech patterns.[114] In a spirit of mischief, Mitford incorporated the U and Non-U thesis into an article she was writing for Encounter on the English aristocracy.[115] Although the aspect formed only a small section of Mitford's article, when it was published in September 1955 it caused a major stir.[114] Few recognised the tongue-in-cheek aspect. Mitford received hundreds of letters from worried readers desperate to know if they were snobs or merely "common".[116] The level of anxious or amused interest was sustained to such an extent that in 1956 Hamish Hamilton reproduced the article in a short book, Noblesse Oblige. The book also included an abbreviated version of Ross's original article,[n 12] and contributions from Waugh,[118] Betjeman, Peter Fleming and Christopher Sykes,[119] It was a tremendous success; as Lovell records, "'U and Non-U' was the buzz phrase of the day ... Nancy's comments made her the arbiter of good manners for several generations".[120] Thompson notes the irony that the U and Non-U labels, perhaps Mitford's best-known legacy, were not her own but were borrowed for the purpose of a "tease".[116][n 13]

Later career

In October 1957 Palewski was appointed as France's ambassador to Italy. Mitford's meetings with him, which had become increasingly rare because of his many political and social commitments, were now reduced to a single visit a year, supplemented with occasional letters. Mitford mainly concealed her true feelings on this separation, although one acquaintance noted her increasingly "savage" teasing of friends, which was perhaps a safety valve: "If she would only tell one she is unhappy one would do what one could to comfort her".[122] In March 1958 Mitford's father, Lord Redesdale, died. After the cremation, she informed her sister Jessica, "the ashes were done up in the sort of parcel he used to bring back from London, rich thick brown paper & incredibly neat knots".[123]

 
Louis XIV, "The Sun King", subject of Mitford's much-praised book

Meanwhile Mitford had completed her latest book, Voltaire in Love, an account of the love affair between Voltaire and the Marquise du Châtelet. She considered it her first truly grown-up work, and her best.[124] Published in 1957, it sold well, was taken seriously by the critics and was warmly praised by Mitford's friends.[125] Its writing had been hampered by painful headaches arising from her apparently failing eyesight and worries that she might be going blind. The problem was resolved after a visit to the ophthalmic surgeon Patrick Trevor-Roper, who gave her new spectacles: "It is heavenly to be able to read for a long time on end & now I see how handicapped I was when doing Voltaire".[126] She then returned to writing fiction, with Don't Tell Alfred, in which she revived Fanny Wincham, the narrator of The Pursuit of Love and Love in a Cold Climate, and placed her in a Paris setting as wife of the British ambassador. Several characters familiar from the earlier novels appear in minor roles. The book, published in October 1960, was popular with the public, but received indifferent reviews. Some of Mitford's friends disliked it, and she decided she would write no more fiction.[127]

In August 1962 Palewski was appointed a minister in Georges Pompidou's government, and returned to Paris. This did not mean more regular or frequent meetings, and the affair with Mitford continued at arm's length.[128][n 14] In April 1963 Mitford was in England for the wedding of her cousin Angus Ogilvy to Princess Alexandra. A month later she was back for the funeral of her mother, Lady Redesdale, who died on 25 May.[15] Mitford's friends were dying, too, "in middle age", she informed her long-time friend Violet Hammersley.[129] The premature deaths included that of Evelyn Waugh, who died on 10 April 1966. Mitford saw the kindness and humour concealed behind his hostile public image,[25] and said after his death: "What nobody ever remembers about Evelyn is everything with him was jokes. Everything".[130] Thompson calls their relationship "one of the great literary friendships of the twentieth century".[131]

Amidst these personal upheavals Mitford continued writing. In 1964 she began work on The Sun King, a biography of King Louis XIV. Her publishers decided to issue it as a lavishly illustrated "coffee table" book. When it was published in August 1966, among the many tributes to the book was that of President de Gaulle, who recommended it to every member of his cabinet.[132][133] By this time, Mitford's relationship with Palewski had become dormant, and she recognised that the best days would never return.[134] Under pressure from her landlords to leave her rue Monsieur apartment—they had raised her rent "exorbitantly"— she decided to leave Paris and buy herself a house in Versailles.[135]

Final years

 
The graves in Swinbrook churchyard of (left) Nancy, (centre) Unity and (right) Diana, who died in 2003

Mitford moved to No. 4 rue d'Artois, Versailles, in January 1967. The modest house had a half-acre (0.2 hectare) garden, which soon became one of her chief delights.[136] In 1968 she began work on her final book, a biography of Frederick the Great. While confined at home in March 1969 after a series of illnesses she learned from a newspaper announcement that Palewski had married the Duchesse de Sagan, a rich divorcée. Mitford had long accepted that Palewski would never marry her. Nevertheless, she was deeply hurt by the news, although she affected a typical nonchalance.[137] Shortly after, she entered hospital for the removal of a tumour. After the operation she continued to suffer pain, although she was able to continue working on her book. In October 1969 she undertook a tour of East Germany, to visit former royal palaces and battlefields.[138] She finished the book, but in April 1970 was back in hospital for further tests, which did not lead to either a diagnosis or effective treatment.[139]

Frederick the Great was published later in 1970 to a muted reception.[25] Mitford's remaining years were dominated by her illness, although for a time she enjoyed visits from her sisters and friends, and working in her garden. In April 1972 the French government made her a Chevalier of the Légion d'Honneur, and later that year the British government appointed her a Commander of the Order of the British Empire (CBE). She was delighted by the former honour, and amused by the latter—which she remembered Waugh had called an "insult" and turned down.[1] At the end of 1972 she entered the Nuffield Clinic in London, where she was diagnosed with Hodgkin's lymphoma, a cancer of the blood. She lived for another six months, unable to look after herself and in almost constant pain, struggling to keep her spirits up. She wrote to her friend James Lees-Milne: "It's very curious, dying, and would have many a drôle amusing & charming side were it not for the pain".[140] She died on 30 June 1973 at her home in the rue d'Artois and was cremated in Versailles, after which her ashes were taken to Swinbrook for burial alongside her sister Unity.[141]

Writings

Fiction

"For months, Nancy had sat giggling helplessly before the drawing-room fire, her curiously triangular green eyes flashing with amusement while her thin pen flew along the lines of a child's exercise book. Sometimes she read bits aloud to us".

Jessica Mitford describes the genesis of Highland Fling.[142]

Mitford had no training as a writer or journalist; her style, particularly in the pre-war novels, is chatty and informal, much as in her letters.[51] She may have inherited some of her natural wit and sharpness of expression from her maternal grandfather Thomas Bowles, who in his youth during the Franco-Prussian War had provided dispatches which Acton describes as "extremely graphic and amusing".[143] Mitford's fiction, based on upper-class family life and mores, belongs to the genre of the comedy of manners. Her protagonists—typically, intelligent women surrounded by eccentric characters determined to find life amusing—are broadly autobiographical.[144][145] It is unsurprising, says Thompson, that Mitford should first attempt to write a novel in the early 1930s, since many of her friends were doing the same thing. What is surprising, Thompson adds, is the ease with which she found a publisher for this first book. Perhaps, says Thompson, her publishers Thornton Butterworth "liked the idea of this pretty, well-connected girl who wrote in the style du jour".[50] Mitford was later embarrassed by her prewar novels; Rachel Cooke, writing on their reissue in 2011, believes she had no reason to be: "There is a special kind of energy here, and its engine is the admirable and irresistible commitment of a writer who would rather die than be boring".[146]

Critics generally place the postwar novels in a different league from the earlier efforts; Cooke describes The Pursuit of Love as "an immaculate novel that soars many miles above what came before".[146] In Acton's view it and its companion volume Love in a Cold Climate present an entirely authentic picture of country house life in England between the wars, and will long be consulted by historians of the period.[147] In these later novels Zoë Heller of the Daily Telegraph hears in the prose, behind a new level of care and artfulness, "the unmistakeable Mitford trill, in whose light, bright cadences an entire hard-to-shock and easy-to-bore view of life is made manifest".[148] At times a more serious undertone, contrasting with the "bright, brittle, essentially ephemeral" nature of her early works,[149] becomes evident; Olivia Laing in the Guardian, discerns "a faint and beguiling pessimism about love's pursuit and its consequences" beneath the light superficiality.[150]

The Blessing has provoked a more divided response. Waugh's judgement was that those who criticised the book were "lazy brutes ... [who] ... can't bear to see a writer grow up".[151] More recently, Philip Hensher and others have argued that although the novel is immensely enjoyable and that Mitford's "marvellous voice" is undiminished, she is on less sure ground with her "Frenchness" than with the English country house ambience, and her picture of France as the embodiment of everything civilised is less than convincing.[152] Similar mixed comments greeted Mitford's final novel, Don't Tell Alfred, Waugh again hailing it as her best, "clamouring for a sequel".[153] In this judgement he was largely alone; other critics perceived in the anecdotal framework of the book an uncertainty as to what it was about. An American reviewer wondered what parts were to be taken seriously: "What exactly goes on? ... Can you always tell an Etonian, even when he goes beat? Is all modern architecture a fraud? Do U-people really talk this way?"[154] Similar questions were raised in the Times Literary Supplement's review, in relation to Mitford's fictional output as a whole: "Would she have been a better novelist if she had 'tried harder', gone in further, dropped the pose of amateurishness, cut the charm, looked beyond the worlds that she knew and, more importantly, loved?"[155]

Biographical works

The gift for vivid characterisation, which Mitford developed in her fiction, was used to full effect in her four biographical works. In the first of these, Madame de Pompadour, she followed Waugh's advice not to write for experts but to fashion "a popular life like Strachey's Queen Victoria", with "plenty of period prettiness".[156] This remained her yardstick in her subsequent biographical writings. Her own description of Voltaire in Love is "a Kinsey report of his romps with Mme de Châtelet and her romps with Saint-Lambert and his romps with Mme de Boufflers ... I could go on for pages".[157] Acton thought The Sun King the most entertaining introduction to the subject in the English language. Mitford's informal style was remarked on by the literary critic Cyril Connolly, who wrote that her facility for transforming unpromising source material into readable form was a skill that any professional historian might envy.[158] The historian Antonia Fraser considered Mitford an important contributor to the "remorseless process by which historical and biographical sales have soared since 1950".[159]

Journalism, letters and other works

Mitford did not regard herself as a journalist: nevertheless, her articles were popular, particularly those she contributed on Paris life to The Sunday Times. Thompson describes this series as "a more sophisticated version of A Year in Provence, bringing France to the English in just the way that they most like it".[160] Thompson adds that although Mitford was always a competent writer, it is in her letters, with their freedom of expression and flights of fancy, that her true character emerges. Many have been published within collections; they are, according to The Independent's reviewer: "a delight, full of the sparks of an abrasive and entertaining wit, refreshingly free from politeness".[161]

List of works

(Publisher details are for first publication only)

Novels

  • Highland Fling. London: Thornton Butterworth. 1931. OCLC 12145781.
  • Christmas Pudding. London: Thornton Butterworth. 1932. OCLC 639867174.
  • Wigs on the Green. London: Thornton Butterworth. 1935. OCLC 5728619.
  • Pigeon Pie. London: Hamish Hamilton. 1940. OCLC 709966771. [162]
  • The Pursuit of Love. London: Hamish Hamilton. 1945. OCLC 857990796.
  • Love in a Cold Climate. London: Hamish Hamilton. 1949. OCLC 563596524.
  • The Blessing. London: Hamish Hamilton. 1951. OCLC 752807050.
  • Don't Tell Alfred. London: Hamish Hamilton. 1960. OCLC 757838847.

Biographies

  • Madame de Pompadour. London: Hamish Hamilton. 1954. OCLC 432649137. Illustrated edition (1968)
  • Voltaire in Love. London: Hamish Hamilton. 1957. OCLC 459588409.
  • The Sun King: Louis XIV at Versailles. London: Hamish Hamilton. 1966. OCLC 229419330.
  • Frederick the Great. London: Hamish Hamilton. 1970. ISBN 0-241-01922-2.

Translation

  • The Little Hut. London: Hamish Hamilton. 1951. OCLC 317377443. (play translated and adapted from André Roussin's La petite hutte)

As editor

  • The Ladies of Alderley: Letters 1841–1850. London: Chapman & Hall. 1938. OCLC 408486.
  • The Stanleys of Alderley: Letters 1851–1865. London: Chapman & Hall. 1939. OCLC 796961504.
  • Noblesse Oblige: An Inquiry into the Identifiable Characteristics of the English Aristocracy. London: Hamish Hamilton. 1956. OCLC 219758991. The book includes Mitford's essay "The English Aristocracy", first published in Encounter, September 1955.

Collections of letters

  • Mosley, Charlotte, ed. (1993). Love from Nancy: The Letters of Nancy Mitford. London: Hodder & Stoughton. ISBN 978-0-340-53784-8.
  • ——, ed. (1996). The Letters of Nancy Mitford and Evelyn Waugh. London: Hodder & Stoughton. ISBN 0-340-63804-4.
  • ——, ed. (2007). The Mitfords: Letters Between Six Sisters. London: Fourth Estate. ISBN 978-1-84115-790-0.
  • Smith, John Saumarez, ed. (2004). The Bookshop at 10 Curzon Street: Letters between Nancy Mitford and Heywood Hill 1952–73. London: Frances Lincoln. ISBN 978-0-7112-2452-0.

Other works

Mitford was a prolific writer of articles, reviews, essays and prefaces, some of which were published in two collections: The Water Beetle (Hamish Hamilton, 1962) and A Talent to Annoy (Hamish Hamilton, 1986). Her translation of Madame Lafayette's romantic novel La Princesse de Clèves was published in America in 1950, but was heavily criticised.[163]

References

Informational notes

  1. ^ Although "Freeman-Mitford" was the family's surname after 1886, neither Nancy nor her siblings appear to have used it outside formal documents. All Nancy's published work bears the name "Mitford", she specified the name "Mitford" in her CBE citation, and her gravestone bears the shortened name.[1][2]
  2. ^ Mary Soames, daughter of Clementine and Winston Churchill, considers the most likely father of Clementine to have been William George "Bay" Middleton (1846–92), a Scottish landowner, horseman and possible lover of Empress Elizabeth of Austria. Soames suggests that Bertie Mitford may have been the father of Nellie, Clementine's younger sister.[10]
  3. ^ William Mitford's brother John Freeman-Mitford, Speaker of the House of Commons and Lord Chancellor of Ireland, had been ennobled as Baron Redesdale in 1802. The title had lapsed on the death of the first Baron's son.[12][13]
  4. ^ A sixth daughter, Deborah, was born in 1920. Hastings has recorded Lord Redesdale's disappointment that this final child was yet another girl; he had hoped for another son.[30]
  5. ^ Esmond Romilly was the son of Nellie, Clementine Churchill's younger sister, but rumours suggested that Romilly was actually the product of an affair between his mother and her brother-in-law, Winston Churchill. There was a distinct physical resemblance between the young Churchill and Romilly. In his biography of Romilly, Kevin Ingram rejects the suggestion of Churchill's paternity as unfounded, possibly invented by Nancy as a tease.[67][68]
  6. ^ In May 1940, after Hitler's invasion of the Low Countries, Esmond Romilly joined the Royal Canadian Air Force and after training as an observer was commissioned as a pilot officer. He was killed in November 1941 in the course of a bombing raid on Hamburg.[69]
  7. ^ Although she made a partial recovery and lived a further nine years, the damage to Unity was permanent. The bullet proved impossible to remove and eventually caused a fatal attack of meningitis.[79]
  8. ^ Diana was unaware of Nancy's role in her imprisonment until many years after the war. Both remained on affectionate terms during the remainder of Nancy's lifetime. However, in a television programme in 2001 Diana described her sister as "the most disloyal person I ever knew".[82][83]
  9. ^ The shop had been founded in 1936 by G. Heywood Hill. Mitford later bought a partnership in the business; her share was eventually passed to her nephew the Duke of Devonshire. Between 1995 and 2004, the shop sponsored a literary prize, which it revived in 2011 (in a revised form) to mark the bookshop's 75th anniversary.[89]
  10. ^ Tom, strongly pro-German, had requested that he be sent to Burma to fight the Japanese, rather than to fight against Germans.[94]
  11. ^ Rodd and Mitford were divorced in 1957, and he died in 1968.[98]
  12. ^ An article in Language, the journal of the Linguistic Society of America, complained that too much of the original Ross article had been omitted, including everything related to pronunciation.[117]
  13. ^ The terms "U and Non-U" entered the language permanently; Thompson argues that the notoriety associated with Noblesse Oblige came to haunt Mitford, partly by branding her in some eyes as a "super-snob" and partly by distracting attention from her serious writing. The Daily Telegraph's obituary in 1973 was headed: "Nancy Mitford, U and Non-U creator, dies at 68".[121]
  14. ^ Palewski had been conducting a simultaneous affair with another woman, a near neighbour of Mitford in Paris. In 1961 this woman bore Palewski's child. He assured Mitford that he had no intention of marrying the woman and saw no reason why his friendship with Mitford should not continue.[128]

Citations

  1. ^ a b Acton, pp. 232–34
  2. ^ Thompson 2003, p. 1
  3. ^ Burke, p. 282
  4. ^ Burke, p. 286
  5. ^ Wroth, W. W.; Taylor, J. S. (revised) (2004). "Mitford, William (1744–1827)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/18860. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  6. ^ Acton, pp. 2–4
  7. ^ Hastings, p. 2
  8. ^ Lovell, p. 25
  9. ^ Lovell, p. 533
  10. ^ Soames, Ch. 1: "Forbears and Early Childhood"
  11. ^ Gosse, Edmund; Matthew, H. G. C. (revised) (2004). "Mitford, Algernon Bertram Freeman-, first Baron Redesdale (1837–1916)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/35048. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  12. ^ Greer, D. S. (2008) [2004]. "Mitford, John Freeman-, first Baron Redesdale (1748–1830)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/18857. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  13. ^ Sanders, L.C.; Matthews, H. C. G. (revised) (2009) [2004]. "Mitford, John Thomas Freeman-, first earl of Redesdale (1805–1886)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/18858. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  14. ^ Parry, Jonathan (2014) [2004]. "Russell, John, Viscount Amberley (1842–18769)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/24324. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  15. ^ a b Hastings, pp. 234–35
  16. ^ Lovell, p. 338
  17. ^ Hastings, pp. 4–5
  18. ^ Cochrane, Alfred; Matthew, H. C. G. (revised) (2008) [2004]. "Bowles, Thomas Gibson (1842–1922)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/32005. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  19. ^ Hastings, p. 5
  20. ^ Hastings, p. 6
  21. ^ Lovell, pp. 16–17
  22. ^ Hastings, pp. 7–8
  23. ^ Hastings, p. 9
  24. ^ a b Hastings, p. 10
  25. ^ a b c d e f g h Hastings, Selina (2015) [2004]. "Mitford, Nancy Freeman- (1904–1973)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/31450. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  26. ^ Hastings, pp. 15–17
  27. ^ Lovell, p. 32
  28. ^ "Casualty details: Freeman-Mitford, Clement B. Ogilvy". Commonwealth War Graves Commission. Retrieved 5 December 2013.
  29. ^ a b Hastings, pp. 22–24
  30. ^ Hastings, p. 7
  31. ^ Lovell, p. 42
  32. ^ Acton, p. 9
  33. ^ Hastings, p. 33
  34. ^ Lovell, pp. 51–52
  35. ^ Alexander Mosley, quoted in Thompson 2003, p. 47
  36. ^ a b Hastings, pp. 37–38
  37. ^ Thompson 2003, pp. 51–52
  38. ^ Mosley (ed.), pp. 16–17
  39. ^ Hastings, pp. 42–43
  40. ^ Byrne, p. 113
  41. ^ Hastings, pp. 46–49
  42. ^ Byrne, p. 118
  43. ^ Lovell, pp. 107–08
  44. ^ Acton, p. 28
  45. ^ Hastings, pp. 56–61
  46. ^ Thompson 2003, pp. 94–95
  47. ^ Thompson 2003, p. 93
  48. ^ Hastings, p. 69
  49. ^ Mosley (ed.), p. 62
  50. ^ a b Thompson 2003, pp. 86–88
  51. ^ a b Hastings, p. 70
  52. ^ Hastings, pp. 71–72
  53. ^ a b Lovell, pp. 147–49
  54. ^ Hastings, pp. 73–75
  55. ^ Hastings, pp. 76–77
  56. ^ Thompson 2003, pp. 99–100
  57. ^ Mosley (ed.), p. 90
  58. ^ a b Lovell, pp. 150–51
  59. ^ Loraine, Percy. "Rodd, James Rennell". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Online edition. Retrieved 10 December 2013.
  60. ^ Acton, p. 40
  61. ^ Sykes, p. 41
  62. ^ Hastings, pp. 87–91
  63. ^ Hastings, pp. 92 and 96–97
  64. ^ "Trove". trove.nla.gov.au. Retrieved 10 December 2022.
  65. ^ Lovell, pp. 196–97
  66. ^ Hastings, pp. 105–10
  67. ^ Ingram, pp. 17–18
  68. ^ Lovell, p. 26
  69. ^ a b Parker, Peter (2014) [2004]. "Romilly, Esmond Marcus David (1918–1941)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/60277. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  70. ^ a b Hastings, pp. 111–12
  71. ^ Thompson 2003, p. 127
  72. ^ Hastings, p. 115
  73. ^ Hastings, pp. 116–18
  74. ^ Mosley (ed.), p. 116
  75. ^ Thompson 2003, p. 140
  76. ^ Hastings, p. 95
  77. ^ Hastings, pp. 113–14
  78. ^ Hastings, p. 119
  79. ^ a b Davenport-Hines, Richard. "Mitford, Unity Valkyrie Freeman- (1914–1948)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/58824. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  80. ^ Lovell, pp. 324–25
  81. ^ Reynolds, Paul (14 November 2003). "Nancy Mitford spied on sisters". BBC News. Retrieved 16 December 2013.
  82. ^ Thompson 2003, p. 167
  83. ^ Hastings, p. 131
  84. ^ Thompson 2003, pp. 146 and 151
  85. ^ Hastings, pp. 128–29
  86. ^ Thompson 2003, pp. 160–61
  87. ^ Hastings, p. 135
  88. ^ Hastings, pp. 133–41
  89. ^ Devonshire, Stoker (3 December 2011). "A new chapter". The Spectator. Retrieved 20 June 2016.
  90. ^ Thompson 2003, pp. 184–85
  91. ^ Lovell, pp. 356–58
  92. ^ Thompson 2003, p. 209
  93. ^ a b Hastings, pp. 165–67
  94. ^ a b Thompson 2003, pp. 221–22
  95. ^ Thompson 2003, pp. 225–27
  96. ^ Hastings, p. 168
  97. ^ a b Hastings, pp. 171–72
  98. ^ Hastings, pp. 204 and 232
  99. ^ a b Hastings, pp. 173–82
  100. ^ Mosley (ed.), pp. 184–85
  101. ^ Acton, pp. 71–72
  102. ^ Hastings, pp. 221–22
  103. ^ Hastings, p. 189
  104. ^ Amory (ed.), p. 301
  105. ^ a b Thompson 2003, pp. 284–86
  106. ^ "Lyric Theatre". The Times. 24 August 1950. p. 6.
  107. ^ Thompson 2003, p. 279
  108. ^ Acton, p. 85
  109. ^ Amory (ed.), p. 346
  110. ^ Hastings, pp. 219–20
  111. ^ Mosley (ed.), pp. 381–82
  112. ^ Thompson 2003, pp. 287–88
  113. ^ Ross, Alan S.C. (1954). (PDF). Neuphilologische Mitteilungen: 113–49. Archived from the original (PDF) on 19 August 2017.
  114. ^ a b Hastings, pp. 223–25
  115. ^ Mitford, Nancy (September 1955). "The English Aristocracy". Encounter: 11–15.
  116. ^ a b Thompson 2003, pp. 294–95
  117. ^ Bailey, Richard W. (March 2005). "Reviews: Talking Proper: The rise of accent as a social symbol". Language. 81 (1): 269–71. doi:10.1353/lan.2005.0002. JSTOR 4489870. S2CID 143494221. (subscription required)
  118. ^ Waugh, Evelyn (December 1955). "An Open Letter to the Hon. Mrs. Peter Rodd (Nancy Mitford) on a Very Serious Subject". Encounter: 11–16.
  119. ^ Acton, p. 99
  120. ^ Lovell, pp. 452–53
  121. ^ Thompson 2003, p. 297
  122. ^ Hastings, pp. 213–14
  123. ^ Lovell, p. 455
  124. ^ Thompson 2003, p. 340
  125. ^ Thompson 2003, p. 346
  126. ^ Hastings, p. 226
  127. ^ Hastings, pp. 227–30
  128. ^ a b Hastings, pp. 215–17
  129. ^ Acton, p. 143
  130. ^ Thompson 2003, p. 370
  131. ^ Thompson 2003, p. 272
  132. ^ Hastings, pp. 236–38
  133. ^ Thompson 2003, p. 376
  134. ^ Thompson 2003, p. 372
  135. ^ Acton, p. 173
  136. ^ Lovell, p. 485
  137. ^ Hastings, pp. 242–44
  138. ^ Hastings, p. 247
  139. ^ Thompson 2003, p. 387
  140. ^ Thompson 2003, p. 398
  141. ^ Hastings, p. 255
  142. ^ Acton, p. 25
  143. ^ Acton, p. 26
  144. ^ Blain et al, p. 747
  145. ^ Drabble (ed.), p. 657
  146. ^ a b Cooke, Rachel (23 December 2011). "Rereading: Christmas Pudding by Nancy Mitford". The Guardian. Retrieved 20 June 2016.
  147. ^ Acton, p. 59
  148. ^ Heller, Zoë (8 March 2010). "Zoë Heller on Nancy Mitford". The Daily Telegraph. Retrieved 20 June 2016.
  149. ^ Hastings, p. 129
  150. ^ Laing, Olivia (21 March 2010). "The Pursuit of Love by Nancy Mitford". The Guardian. Retrieved 20 June 2016.
  151. ^ Amory (ed.), p. 354
  152. ^ Thompson 2003, pp. 307–10
  153. ^ Amory (ed.), pp. 558–59
  154. ^ Quintana, Ricardo (Winter 1962). "Book Reviews: Don't Tell Alfred". Wisconsin Studies in Contemporary Literature. 3 (1): 81–84. doi:10.2307/1207385. JSTOR 1207385. (subscription required)
  155. ^ Thompson 2003, pp. 364–65
  156. ^ Amory (ed.), p. 393
  157. ^ Mosley (ed.), p. 412
  158. ^ Acton, p. 167
  159. ^ Thompson 2003, p. 413
  160. ^ Thompson 2003, p. 281
  161. ^ Walter, Natasha (2 October 1993). "Review: Pursuit of bloody-minded charm: 'Love From Nancy: The Letters of Nancy Mitford'". The Independent. Archived from the original on 18 June 2022. Retrieved 20 June 2016.
  162. ^ [1], The Guardian, 22 April 2012
  163. ^ Thompson 2003, p. 253

Bibliography

  • Acton, Harold (1975). Nancy Mitford: A Memoir. New York: Harper & Row. ISBN 0-06-010018-4.
  • Amory, Mark, ed. (1980). The Letters of Evelyn Waugh. London: Phoenix. ISBN 1-85799-245-8.
  • Blain, Virginia; Clements, Patricia; Grundy, Isobel (1990). The Feminist Companion to English Literature. London: B.T. Batsford Ltd. ISBN 0-7134-5848-8.
  • Burke, John (1836). A Genealogical and Heraldic History of the Commoners of Great Britain and Ireland. London: H. Colburn. p. 282. OCLC 12579942. Sir John Mitford of Mitford.
  • Byrne, Paula (2010). Mad World. London: Harper Press. ISBN 978-0-00-724377-8.
  • Cokayne, G.E.; Gibbs, Vicary; Doubleday, H.A.; White, Geoffrey H.; Warrand, Duncan; de Walden, Lord Howard, eds. (2000). The Complete Peerage of England, Scotland, Ireland, Great Britain and the United Kingdom, Extant, Extinct or Dormant (new ed.). Gloucester, UK: Alan Sutton Publishing.
  • Drabble, Margaret, ed. (1985). The Oxford Companion to English Literature. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-866130-4.
  • Hastings, Selina (1985). Nancy Mitford. London: Hamish Hamilton. ISBN 0-241-11684-8.
  • Ingram, Kevin (1985). Rebel: The Short Life of Esmond Romilly. London: Weidenfeld and Nicolson. ISBN 0-297-78707-1.
  • Lovell, Mary S. (2002). The Mitford Girls: The Biography of an Extraordinary Family. London: Abacus. ISBN 0-349-11505-2.
  • Mosley, Charles, ed. (2003). Burke's Peerage, Baronetage & Knightage (107th ed.). Wilmington, Delaware, U.S.: Burke's Peerage (Genealogical Books) Ltd.
  • Mosley, Charles, ed. (1999). Burke's Peerage and Baronetage (106th ed.). Crans, Switzerland: Burke's Peerage (Genealogical Books) Ltd.
  • Mosley, Charlotte, ed. (1993). Love from Nancy: The Letters of Nancy Mitford. London: Hodder & Stoughton. ISBN 0-340-53784-1.
  • Soames, Mary (2012). Clementine Churchill. London: Random House. ISBN 978-0-679-64518-4. Ebook, first published by Cassell, London 1979. ISBN 0-304-30321-6
  • Sykes, Christopher (1975). Evelyn Waugh: A biography. London: Collins. ISBN 0-00-211202-7.
  • Thompson, Laura (2003). Life in a Cold Climate: Nancy Mitford, Portrait of a Contradictory Woman. London: Headline Book. ISBN 0-7472-4574-6.

External links

nancy, mitford, nancy, freeman, mitford, november, 1904, june, 1973, known, english, novelist, biographer, journalist, eldest, mitford, sisters, regarded, bright, young, things, london, social, scene, inter, period, wrote, several, novels, about, upper, class,. Nancy Freeman Mitford CBE 28 November 1904 30 June 1973 known as Nancy Mitford n 1 was an English novelist biographer and journalist The eldest of the Mitford sisters she was regarded as one of the bright young things on the London social scene in the inter war period She wrote several novels about upper class life in England and France and is considered a sharp and often provocative wit She also has a reputation as a writer of popular historical biographies The HonourableNancy MitfordCBEBornNancy Freeman Mitford 1904 11 28 28 November 1904London EnglandDied30 June 1973 1973 06 30 aged 68 Versailles FranceOccupationNovelist biographerNotable worksThe Pursuit of LoveLove in a Cold ClimateNoblesse Oblige ed SpousePeter Rodd m 1933 div 1957 wbr ParentsDavid Freeman Mitford 2nd Baron Redesdale father Sydney Bowles mother RelativesMitford familyMitford enjoyed a privileged childhood as the eldest daughter of the Hon David Freeman Mitford later 2nd Baron Redesdale Educated privately she had no training as a writer before publishing her first novel in 1931 This early effort and the three that followed it created little stir Her two semi autobiographical post war novels The Pursuit of Love 1945 and Love in a Cold Climate 1949 established her reputation Mitford s marriage to Peter Rodd 1933 proved unsatisfactory to both and they divorced in 1957 after a lengthy separation During the Second World War she formed a liaison with a Free French officer Gaston Palewski who was the love of her life After the war Mitford settled in France and lived there until her death maintaining contact with her many English friends through letters and regular visits During the 1950s Mitford developed the concept of U upper and non U language whereby social origins and standing were identified by words used in everyday speech She had intended this as a joke but many took it seriously and Mitford was considered an authority on manners and breeding Her later years were bittersweet the success of her biographical studies of Madame de Pompadour Voltaire and King Louis XIV contrasting with the ultimate failure of her relationship with Palewski From the late 1960s her health deteriorated and she endured several years of painful illness before her death in 1973 Contents 1 Family 1 1 Selective Mitford family tree 2 Childhood 2 1 Parentage 2 2 First years 2 3 War Batsford Park and Asthall Manor 3 Debutante and socialite 4 Incipient writer 5 Marriage writing and politics 6 Second World War 7 Move to Paris 7 1 Rue Monsieur 7 2 Noblesse Oblige 8 Later career 8 1 Final years 9 Writings 9 1 Fiction 9 2 Biographical works 9 3 Journalism letters and other works 10 List of works 10 1 Novels 10 2 Biographies 10 3 Translation 10 4 As editor 10 5 Collections of letters 10 6 Other works 11 References 12 External linksFamily Edit Bertie Mitford created Baron Redesdale in 1902 The Mitford family dates from the Norman era when Sir John de Mitford held the Castle of Mitford in Northumberland A later Sir John held several important public offices during the late 14th and early 15th centuries and the family maintained a tradition of public service for many generations 3 In the 18th century William Mitford was a leading classical historian responsible for the definitive history of ancient Greece 4 5 His great grandson Algernon Bertram Mitford born in 1837 and known as Bertie was a diplomat and traveller who held minor office in Disraeli s second ministry from 1874 to 1880 6 In 1874 he married Clementina the second daughter of David Ogilvy 10th Earl of Airlie a union that linked the Mitfords to some of Britain s most prominent aristocratic families 7 Blanche Ogilvy Clementina s elder sister became the wife of Sir Henry Montague Hozier a soldier turned businessman Their four children included daughters Clementine Clemmie who in 1908 married the future British Prime Minister Winston Churchill and Nellie who married Bertram Romilly Both Hozier and Blanche were promiscuous and it is generally accepted by historians and family members that Hozier was not Clemmie s father although he was registered as such 8 Blanche told her friend Lady Londonderry shortly before Clemmie s birth that the father of the expected child was her own brother in law Bertie Mitford 9 Most historians believe that other candidates for the paternity are more likely n 2 Bertie Mitford s marriage produced five sons and four daughters His career in government service ended in 1886 when after the death of a cousin he inherited a considerable fortune A condition of the inheritance was that he adopt the surname Freeman Mitford He rebuilt Batsford House in Gloucestershire the family s country seat served briefly as a Unionist MP in the 1890s and otherwise devoted himself to books writings and travel In 1902 he was raised to the peerage as 1st Baron Redesdale a re creation of a title that had previously been held in the family but had lapsed in 1886 11 n 3 Selective Mitford family tree Edit Further information Mitford family Chart showing some of the connections of the Mitford family through marriages to other leading families including the Russells dukes of Bedford 14 the Churchills dukes of Marlborough and via Princess Alexandra the British Royal Family 15 Deborah Mitford married Andrew Cavendish who became the 11th Duke of Devonshire 16 Childhood EditParentage Edit Nancy Mitford s father David Bertram Ogilvy Freeman Mitford was Bertie Mitford s second son born on 13 March 1878 After several years as a tea planter in Ceylon he fought in the Boer War of 1899 1902 and was severely wounded 17 In 1903 he became engaged to Sydney Bowles the elder daughter of Thomas Gibson Bowles known as Tap a journalist editor and magazine proprietor whose publications included Vanity Fair and The Lady 18 The couple were married on 16 February 1904 after which they rented a house in Graham Street in West London 19 Bowles provided his son in law with a job as business manager of The Lady magazine David had little interest in reading and knew nothing of business thus according to Nancy Mitford s biographer Selina Hastings a less congenial post could hardly have been imagined 20 He remained in this position for 10 years 21 The couple s first child a daughter was born on 28 November 1904 they had intended to call her Ruby but after she was born they changed their minds and named her Nancy 22 First years Edit Responsibility for Nancy s day to day upbringing was delegated to her nanny and nursemaid within the framework of Sydney s short lived belief that children should never be corrected or be spoken to in anger Before this experiment was discontinued Nancy had become self centred and uncontrollable Hastings writes that her first years were characterised by roaring red faced rages 23 Just before her third birthday a sister Pamela was born the nanny s apparent change of loyalty in favour of the new arrival was a further source of outrage to Nancy and throughout their childhood and into young adulthood she continued to vent her displeasure on her sister 24 In January 1909 a brother Tom was born and in June 1910 another sister Diana followed 24 That summer to relieve the pressure on what was becoming an overcrowded nursery Nancy attended the nearby Francis Holland School The few months she spent there represented almost the whole of her formal schooling in the autumn the family moved to a larger house in Victoria Road Kensington after which Nancy was educated at home by successive governesses 25 Summers were spent at the family s cottage near High Wycombe in Buckinghamshire or with the children s Redesdale grandparents at Batsford Park 26 In the winter of 1913 14 David and Sydney visited Canada prospecting for gold on a claim that David had purchased in Swastika Ontario It was here that their fifth child was conceived a daughter born in London on 8 August 1914 and christened Unity 27 War Batsford Park and Asthall Manor Edit On the outbreak of the First World War on 4 August 1914 David re joined his regiment and was soon in France In May 1915 Clement David s older brother was killed while serving with the 10th Royal Hussars 28 which made David heir to the Redesdale title and lands On 17 August 1916 Bertie Mitford died David still serving at the front became the 2nd Baron Redesdale Sydney quickly took possession of Batsford House much of which had been shut up for many years and occupied the portion of it that she could afford to heat The children had the run of the house and grounds and were taught together in the schoolroom This was a source of frustration for Nancy whose lively intelligence required greater stimulus She spent many hours reading in the Batsford House library where according to Hastings the foundations of her intellectual life were laid 29 Asthall Manor the Mitford family home between 1919 and 1926 The Redesdale estates were extensive but uneconomical At the end of the war Redesdale decided to sell Batsford Park and move his increasing family a fifth daughter Jessica had been born in September 1917 to less extravagant accommodation n 4 The house was sold early in 1919 together with much of its contents including to Nancy s great dismay a large part of its library 29 The new family home was Asthall Manor a Jacobean mansion near Swinbrook in Oxfordshire This was intended as a short term measure while a new house was built on land nearby 31 The family stayed in Asthall Manor for seven years and it became the basis of many of the family scenes which Nancy was later to portray in her semi autobiographical novels 25 32 Growing up proved a difficult process for Nancy Unable to form a relationship with Pamela the sister nearest to her in age she was bored and irritated by her younger siblings and vented her feelings by teasing and tormenting them 33 Although there was undoubtedly cruelty in her taunting the other children led by Tom formed a Leag sic against Nancy 34 her teasing was also according to the later reflections of her nephew Alexander Mosley a highly honed weapon to keep a lot of highly competitive bright energetic sisters in order She used it as a form of self protection 35 Not all her interactions with her siblings were hostile for their amusement she edited and produced a magazine The Boiler to which she contributed entertainingly gruesome murder stories 36 In 1921 after years of pleading for proper schooling Nancy was allowed a year s boarding at Hatherop Castle an informal private establishment for young ladies of good family Laura Thompson in her biography of Nancy describes Hatherop as not so much a school more a chaste foretaste of debutante life 37 Here Nancy learned French and other subjects played organised games and joined a Girl Guide troop It was her first extended experience of life away from home and she enjoyed it 36 The following year she was allowed to accompany four other girls on a cultural trip to Paris Florence and Venice her letters home are full of expressions of wonder at the sights and treasures I had no idea I was so fond of pictures if only I had a room of my own I would make it a regular picture gallery 38 Debutante and socialite EditNancy s eighteenth birthday in November 1922 was the occasion for a grand coming out ball which marked the beginning of her entry into Society That was followed in June 1923 by her presentation at Court a formal introduction to King George V at Buckingham Palace after which she was officially out and could attend the balls and parties that constituted the London Season She spent much of the next few years in a round of social events making new friends and mixing with the Bright Young People of 1920s London 39 Nancy declared that we hardly saw the light of day except at dawn 40 In 1926 Asthall Manor was finally sold While the new house at Swinbrook was made ready the female members of the family were sent for three months to Paris a period which says Hastings began Nancy s lifelong love affair with France 41 Among Nancy s new London friends was Evelyn Gardner who 42 Nancy informed her brother Tom was engaged to a man called Evelyn Waugh who writes I believe very well 43 She and Waugh later developed a lasting friendship 44 Although she was now of age her father maintained an aggressive hostility towards most of her male friends particularly since as Hastings remarks these tended towards the frivolous the aesthetic and the effeminate Among them was Hamish St Clair Erskine the second son of the 5th Earl of Rosslyn an Oxford undergraduate four years Nancy s junior He was according to Hastings the least suitable partner of all the most shimmering and narcissistic of all the beautiful butterflies and the one most likely to offend Lord Redesdale 45 The pair met in 1928 and became unofficially engaged despite his homosexuality of which Nancy may not have been aware 46 Against a backdrop of negativity from family and friends Waugh advised her to dress better and catch a better man 47 the engagement endured sporadically for several years 25 Incipient writer EditAs a means of augmenting the meagre allowance provided by her father Mitford began writing encouraged by Waugh Her first efforts anonymous contributions to gossip columns in society magazines led to occasional signed articles 48 and in 1930 The Lady engaged her to write a regular column 49 That winter she embarked on a full length novel Highland Fling in which various characters mostly identifiable among her friends acquaintances and family attend a Scottish house party which develops chaotically 50 51 The book made little impact when it was published in March 1931 and she immediately began work on another Christmas Pudding illustrated by her close friend Mark Ogilvie Grant Like the earlier novel the plot centres on a clash between the Bright Young People and the older generation Hamish Erskine is clearly identifiable in the character of Bobby Bobbin and John Betjeman is the basis for the supporting role of Bobby s tutor 52 The thinly disguised caricatures pervading the book shocked Lady Redesdale who thought it could not possibly be published under Mitford s own name 53 The affair between Erskine and Mitford continued intermittently 53 While she often despaired of the relationship she refused other offers of marriage saying that she would never marry anyone except Hamish 54 In 1932 her plight was overshadowed by a family scandal involving her younger sister Diana who had married Bryan Guinness in 1928 and was the mother of two young sons In 1932 Diana deserted her husband to become the mistress of Sir Oswald Mosley the leader of the British Union of Fascists himself married with three children Almost alone of her family Mitford offered her sister support regularly visiting her and keeping her up to date with family news and social gossip 55 Her own love affair with Erskine came to an abrupt end when in June 1933 he informed her that he intended to marry the daughter of a London banker 56 In a final letter after their parting Mitford wrote to him I thought in your soul you loved me amp that in the end we should have children amp look back on life together when we are old 57 58 Marriage writing and politics Edit Strand on the Green seen from Kew Bridge Within a month of Erskine s departure Mitford announced her engagement to Peter Rodd 58 the second son of Sir Rennell Rodd a diplomat and politician who was ennobled that year as Baron Rennell 59 According to Mitford s friend Harold Acton Rodd was a young man of boundless promise he had abundant qualifications for success in any profession he deigned to choose 60 Other biographers describe him as irresponsible unfaithful a bore and unable to hold down a regular job 25 and as the model for Waugh s unscrupulous amoral character Basil Seal from Black Mischief 61 They were married on 4 December 1933 after which they settled into a cottage at Strand on the Green on the western edges of London Mitford s initial delight in the marriage was soon tempered by money worries Rodd s fecklessness and her dislike of his family 62 In 1934 Mitford began her third novel Wigs on the Green a satire on Sir Oswald Mosley s fascist Blackshirt movement Mitford herself had briefly flirted with Mosley s New Party in 1931 although her enthusiasm was short lived and she soon became a vociferous opponent of the British Union of Fascists and of fascism 63 When the novel was published in 1935 its book cover illustrated by Bip Pares 64 it made little critical impact and seriously offended members of her own family particularly her sisters Diana and Unity both of whom were supporters of Mosley s movement and devotees of the German dictator Adolf Hitler 25 Diana eventually forgave Nancy but Nancy s rift with Unity who was outraged by her depiction in the book as the ridiculous Eugenia Malmains was never fully healed 65 By 1936 Nancy Mitford s marriage was largely a sham Rodd was engaged in an affair with the wife of a friend a situation that continued into the new year when the Mitford family was further shaken by the 19 year old Jessica s elopement with her cousin Esmond Romilly 66 n 5 A rebellious ex Wellington schoolboy and avowed Communist Romilly fought on the Republican side in the Spanish Civil War 69 The young couple were traced to Bilbao and Nancy was despatched to bring them home but failed to persuade them and Jessica and Esmond were married in May 1937 70 Through the winter of 1937 1938 Mitford s main literary task was editing the letters of her cousins the Stanleys of Alderley with whom she was connected through her great grandmother Blanche Airlie 70 Her preoccupation with the project nine or ten hours a day she informed her friend Robert Byron further damaged her relationship with Rodd who resented the time thus spent 71 Nevertheless in the summer of 1938 she discovered that she was pregnant She hoped for a girl 2 Peter Rodds in 1 house is unthinkable but in September she miscarried 72 Early in 1939 Rodd left for southern France to work with the relief organisations assisting the thousands of Spanish refugees who had fled from General Franco s armies in the final stages of the civil war In May Mitford joined him and spent several weeks there as a relief worker 73 She was much affected by what she saw I have never cried so much in all my life 74 The experience hardened her antifascism to the extent that she wrote I would join hands with the devil himself to stop any further extension of the disease 75 Having rejected the political extremes within her family Nancy Mitford was a moderate socialist 76 but some of her works such as her introductions to the Stanley letter collections and her U non U essay of 1955 are staunch defences of the aristocratic traditions and values that she grew up with 77 Second World War EditThe outbreak of war in September 1939 divided the Mitford family Nancy and Rodd supported the Allies in the war The Romillys had by this time departed for America n 6 but the others either hoped for an Anglo German detente or as with Unity were openly pro Nazi 78 Unity was in Munich when war was declared In despair she attempted suicide by shooting herself in the head She survived and was sent home through neutral Switzerland 79 n 7 Mosley and Diana who had married secretly in 1936 were detained under Defence Regulation 18B 80 Nancy in full antifascist mode had described her sister to the British Intelligence agency MI5 as a ruthless and shrewd egotist a devoted fascist and admirer of Hitler who sincerely desires the downfall of England and democracy in general 81 n 8 During the Phoney War of 1939 1940 Nancy was briefly an Air Raid Precautions ARP driver and later worked shifts at a first aid post in Paddington 84 She drew on those experiences in her fourth novel Pigeon Pie a comedy about spying It was published by Hamish Hamilton in May 1940 while there was little public appetite for lighthearted war satire and the book was a commercial failure 85 Commemorative plaque at the entrance to the Heywood Hill bookshop Curzon Street In April 1940 Mitford suffered her second miscarriage Shortly afterward Rodd who had been commissioned into the Welsh Guards departed overseas 86 Alone in London Mitford moved to the family s Rutland Gate house where she remained during the London Blitz The main house had been requisitioned to provide a refuge for Jewish families evacuated from the bombed areas of the East End Mitford spent much of her time looking after those families so hard working clean and grateful 87 A brief affair with a Free French officer Andre Roy resulted in a third pregnancy Mitford again miscarried with complications that led in November 1941 to a hysterectomy 88 After convalescence at loose ends she began working as an assistant at the Heywood Hill bookshop in Curzon Street n 9 The shop became the centre of Mitford s daily activities and was a favoured meeting place for London s literati 90 In September 1942 she met Gaston Palewski a French colonel attached to General Charles de Gaulle s London staff She found him fascinating and he became the love of her life though her feelings were never fully reciprocated He was an inspiration for much of her future writing For the sake of Mitford s reputation the affair was pursued with discretion before Palewski left for Algeria in May 1943 Thereafter the relationship was conducted mainly by letters and occasional phone calls since Palewski was only intermittently in England before the end of the war 91 The failure of Pigeon Pie had cooled Mitford s desire to write but in 1944 with Waugh s encouragement she began planning a new novel In March 1945 she was given three months leave from the shop to write it 92 The Pursuit of Love is a heavily autobiographical romantic comedy in which many of her family and acquaintances appear in thin disguises 93 Despite the distraction of learning that her brother Tom had died fighting in Burma 94 n 10 she finished the book and in September went to Paris Ostensibly that was to establish a French branch of Heywood Hill but in reality she wished to be close to Palewski who was now a member of de Gaulle s postwar provisional government 95 She was back in London in December 1945 for the publication of The Pursuit of Love which was Hastings records an instant and phenomenal success the perfect antidote to the long war years of hardship and austerity providing the undernourished public with its favourite ingredients love childhood and the English upper classes 93 The book sold 200 000 copies within a year of publication and firmly established Mitford as a best selling author 96 Move to Paris EditAt the end of the war Rodd returned home but the marriage was essentially over Although remaining on friendly terms the couple led separate lives 97 n 11 Mitford s visit to France in late 1945 had revived her longing to be there and in April 1946 having given up working in the shop the previous month she left London to make her permanent home in Paris and never lived in England again 97 She was a prolific letter writer and kept contact with her large cohort of friends by a voluminous correspondence According to Hastings she developed many of her friendships far further on paper than she could have done through normal social intercourse 99 Rue Monsieur Edit I am so completely happy here I feel a totally different person as if I had come out of a coal mine into daylight Diana Cooper is being too angelic I am captivated completely by her beauty and charm Oh my passion for the French Nancy Mitford writing to her mother after deciding to live permanently in France 100 l During her first 18 months in Paris Mitford lived in several short term lodgings while she enjoyed a hectic social life the hub of which was the British Embassy under the regime of the ambassador Duff Cooper and his socialite wife Lady Diana Cooper 99 Eventually Mitford found a comfortable apartment with a maid at No 7 rue Monsieur on the Left Bank close to Palewski s residence 101 Settled there in comfort she established a pattern to her life that she mostly followed for the next 20 years her precise timetable being determined by Palewski s varying availability Her socialising entertaining and working were interspersed with regular short visits to family and friends in England and summers generally spent in Venice 25 102 In 1948 Mitford completed a new novel a sequel to The Pursuit of Love that she called Love in a Cold Climate with the same country house ambience as the earlier book and many of the same characters The novel s reception was even warmer than that of its predecessor Waugh was one of the few critics to qualify his praise he thought that the descriptions were good but the conversations poor 103 104 In 1950 she translated and adapted Andre Roussin s play La petite hutte The Little Hut in preparation for its successful West End debut in August 105 The Times s critic noted the habit of speech at once colloquial and unexpected which instantly declares itself the creation of Miss Mitford 106 The play ran for 1 261 performances and provided Mitford with a steady 300 per month in royalties 105 The same year The Sunday Times asked her to contribute a regular column which she did for four years 107 The busy period in her writing life continued in 1951 with her third postwar novel The Blessing another semi autobiographical romance this time set in Paris in which an aristocratic young Englishwoman is married to a libidinous French marquis Harold Acton deems it her most accomplished novel permeated with her joyous love of France 108 This time Waugh to whom the book was dedicated had no criticism he found the book admirable deliciously funny consistent and complete by far the best of your writings 109 Mitford then began her first serious non fiction work a biography of Madame de Pompadour The general view of the critics when the book was published in March 1954 was that it was marvelous entertainment if hardly to be taken as history 110 The historian AJP Taylor likened Mitford s evocation of 18th century Versailles to Alconleigh the fictitious country house that formed the background to her recent best selling novels a comparison that she found offensive 111 112 Noblesse Oblige Edit Main article Noblesse Oblige book Mitford in 1956 In 1954 Alan Ross a University of Birmingham professor of linguistics devised the terms U and Non U to differentiate the speech patterns of the social classes in England U indicated upper class usage and Non U the conventions of the lower strata of society 113 His article in a learned Finnish journal and with an illustrative glossary used The Pursuit of Love to exemplify upper class speech patterns 114 In a spirit of mischief Mitford incorporated the U and Non U thesis into an article she was writing for Encounter on the English aristocracy 115 Although the aspect formed only a small section of Mitford s article when it was published in September 1955 it caused a major stir 114 Few recognised the tongue in cheek aspect Mitford received hundreds of letters from worried readers desperate to know if they were snobs or merely common 116 The level of anxious or amused interest was sustained to such an extent that in 1956 Hamish Hamilton reproduced the article in a short book Noblesse Oblige The book also included an abbreviated version of Ross s original article n 12 and contributions from Waugh 118 Betjeman Peter Fleming and Christopher Sykes 119 It was a tremendous success as Lovell records U and Non U was the buzz phrase of the day Nancy s comments made her the arbiter of good manners for several generations 120 Thompson notes the irony that the U and Non U labels perhaps Mitford s best known legacy were not her own but were borrowed for the purpose of a tease 116 n 13 Later career EditIn October 1957 Palewski was appointed as France s ambassador to Italy Mitford s meetings with him which had become increasingly rare because of his many political and social commitments were now reduced to a single visit a year supplemented with occasional letters Mitford mainly concealed her true feelings on this separation although one acquaintance noted her increasingly savage teasing of friends which was perhaps a safety valve If she would only tell one she is unhappy one would do what one could to comfort her 122 In March 1958 Mitford s father Lord Redesdale died After the cremation she informed her sister Jessica the ashes were done up in the sort of parcel he used to bring back from London rich thick brown paper amp incredibly neat knots 123 Louis XIV The Sun King subject of Mitford s much praised book Meanwhile Mitford had completed her latest book Voltaire in Love an account of the love affair between Voltaire and the Marquise du Chatelet She considered it her first truly grown up work and her best 124 Published in 1957 it sold well was taken seriously by the critics and was warmly praised by Mitford s friends 125 Its writing had been hampered by painful headaches arising from her apparently failing eyesight and worries that she might be going blind The problem was resolved after a visit to the ophthalmic surgeon Patrick Trevor Roper who gave her new spectacles It is heavenly to be able to read for a long time on end amp now I see how handicapped I was when doing Voltaire 126 She then returned to writing fiction with Don t Tell Alfred in which she revived Fanny Wincham the narrator of The Pursuit of Love and Love in a Cold Climate and placed her in a Paris setting as wife of the British ambassador Several characters familiar from the earlier novels appear in minor roles The book published in October 1960 was popular with the public but received indifferent reviews Some of Mitford s friends disliked it and she decided she would write no more fiction 127 In August 1962 Palewski was appointed a minister in Georges Pompidou s government and returned to Paris This did not mean more regular or frequent meetings and the affair with Mitford continued at arm s length 128 n 14 In April 1963 Mitford was in England for the wedding of her cousin Angus Ogilvy to Princess Alexandra A month later she was back for the funeral of her mother Lady Redesdale who died on 25 May 15 Mitford s friends were dying too in middle age she informed her long time friend Violet Hammersley 129 The premature deaths included that of Evelyn Waugh who died on 10 April 1966 Mitford saw the kindness and humour concealed behind his hostile public image 25 and said after his death What nobody ever remembers about Evelyn is everything with him was jokes Everything 130 Thompson calls their relationship one of the great literary friendships of the twentieth century 131 Amidst these personal upheavals Mitford continued writing In 1964 she began work on The Sun King a biography of King Louis XIV Her publishers decided to issue it as a lavishly illustrated coffee table book When it was published in August 1966 among the many tributes to the book was that of President de Gaulle who recommended it to every member of his cabinet 132 133 By this time Mitford s relationship with Palewski had become dormant and she recognised that the best days would never return 134 Under pressure from her landlords to leave her rue Monsieur apartment they had raised her rent exorbitantly she decided to leave Paris and buy herself a house in Versailles 135 Final years Edit The graves in Swinbrook churchyard of left Nancy centre Unity and right Diana who died in 2003 Mitford moved to No 4 rue d Artois Versailles in January 1967 The modest house had a half acre 0 2 hectare garden which soon became one of her chief delights 136 In 1968 she began work on her final book a biography of Frederick the Great While confined at home in March 1969 after a series of illnesses she learned from a newspaper announcement that Palewski had married the Duchesse de Sagan a rich divorcee Mitford had long accepted that Palewski would never marry her Nevertheless she was deeply hurt by the news although she affected a typical nonchalance 137 Shortly after she entered hospital for the removal of a tumour After the operation she continued to suffer pain although she was able to continue working on her book In October 1969 she undertook a tour of East Germany to visit former royal palaces and battlefields 138 She finished the book but in April 1970 was back in hospital for further tests which did not lead to either a diagnosis or effective treatment 139 Frederick the Great was published later in 1970 to a muted reception 25 Mitford s remaining years were dominated by her illness although for a time she enjoyed visits from her sisters and friends and working in her garden In April 1972 the French government made her a Chevalier of the Legion d Honneur and later that year the British government appointed her a Commander of the Order of the British Empire CBE She was delighted by the former honour and amused by the latter which she remembered Waugh had called an insult and turned down 1 At the end of 1972 she entered the Nuffield Clinic in London where she was diagnosed with Hodgkin s lymphoma a cancer of the blood She lived for another six months unable to look after herself and in almost constant pain struggling to keep her spirits up She wrote to her friend James Lees Milne It s very curious dying and would have many a drole amusing amp charming side were it not for the pain 140 She died on 30 June 1973 at her home in the rue d Artois and was cremated in Versailles after which her ashes were taken to Swinbrook for burial alongside her sister Unity 141 Writings EditFiction Edit For months Nancy had sat giggling helplessly before the drawing room fire her curiously triangular green eyes flashing with amusement while her thin pen flew along the lines of a child s exercise book Sometimes she read bits aloud to us Jessica Mitford describes the genesis of Highland Fling 142 Mitford had no training as a writer or journalist her style particularly in the pre war novels is chatty and informal much as in her letters 51 She may have inherited some of her natural wit and sharpness of expression from her maternal grandfather Thomas Bowles who in his youth during the Franco Prussian War had provided dispatches which Acton describes as extremely graphic and amusing 143 Mitford s fiction based on upper class family life and mores belongs to the genre of the comedy of manners Her protagonists typically intelligent women surrounded by eccentric characters determined to find life amusing are broadly autobiographical 144 145 It is unsurprising says Thompson that Mitford should first attempt to write a novel in the early 1930s since many of her friends were doing the same thing What is surprising Thompson adds is the ease with which she found a publisher for this first book Perhaps says Thompson her publishers Thornton Butterworth liked the idea of this pretty well connected girl who wrote in the style du jour 50 Mitford was later embarrassed by her prewar novels Rachel Cooke writing on their reissue in 2011 believes she had no reason to be There is a special kind of energy here and its engine is the admirable and irresistible commitment of a writer who would rather die than be boring 146 Critics generally place the postwar novels in a different league from the earlier efforts Cooke describes The Pursuit of Love as an immaculate novel that soars many miles above what came before 146 In Acton s view it and its companion volume Love in a Cold Climate present an entirely authentic picture of country house life in England between the wars and will long be consulted by historians of the period 147 In these later novels Zoe Heller of the Daily Telegraph hears in the prose behind a new level of care and artfulness the unmistakeable Mitford trill in whose light bright cadences an entire hard to shock and easy to bore view of life is made manifest 148 At times a more serious undertone contrasting with the bright brittle essentially ephemeral nature of her early works 149 becomes evident Olivia Laing in the Guardian discerns a faint and beguiling pessimism about love s pursuit and its consequences beneath the light superficiality 150 The Blessing has provoked a more divided response Waugh s judgement was that those who criticised the book were lazy brutes who can t bear to see a writer grow up 151 More recently Philip Hensher and others have argued that although the novel is immensely enjoyable and that Mitford s marvellous voice is undiminished she is on less sure ground with her Frenchness than with the English country house ambience and her picture of France as the embodiment of everything civilised is less than convincing 152 Similar mixed comments greeted Mitford s final novel Don t Tell Alfred Waugh again hailing it as her best clamouring for a sequel 153 In this judgement he was largely alone other critics perceived in the anecdotal framework of the book an uncertainty as to what it was about An American reviewer wondered what parts were to be taken seriously What exactly goes on Can you always tell an Etonian even when he goes beat Is all modern architecture a fraud Do U people really talk this way 154 Similar questions were raised in the Times Literary Supplement s review in relation to Mitford s fictional output as a whole Would she have been a better novelist if she had tried harder gone in further dropped the pose of amateurishness cut the charm looked beyond the worlds that she knew and more importantly loved 155 Biographical works Edit The gift for vivid characterisation which Mitford developed in her fiction was used to full effect in her four biographical works In the first of these Madame de Pompadour she followed Waugh s advice not to write for experts but to fashion a popular life like Strachey s Queen Victoria with plenty of period prettiness 156 This remained her yardstick in her subsequent biographical writings Her own description of Voltaire in Love is a Kinsey report of his romps with Mme de Chatelet and her romps with Saint Lambert and his romps with Mme de Boufflers I could go on for pages 157 Acton thought The Sun King the most entertaining introduction to the subject in the English language Mitford s informal style was remarked on by the literary critic Cyril Connolly who wrote that her facility for transforming unpromising source material into readable form was a skill that any professional historian might envy 158 The historian Antonia Fraser considered Mitford an important contributor to the remorseless process by which historical and biographical sales have soared since 1950 159 Journalism letters and other works Edit Mitford did not regard herself as a journalist nevertheless her articles were popular particularly those she contributed on Paris life to The Sunday Times Thompson describes this series as a more sophisticated version of A Year in Provence bringing France to the English in just the way that they most like it 160 Thompson adds that although Mitford was always a competent writer it is in her letters with their freedom of expression and flights of fancy that her true character emerges Many have been published within collections they are according to The Independent s reviewer a delight full of the sparks of an abrasive and entertaining wit refreshingly free from politeness 161 List of works Edit Publisher details are for first publication only Novels Edit Highland Fling London Thornton Butterworth 1931 OCLC 12145781 Christmas Pudding London Thornton Butterworth 1932 OCLC 639867174 Wigs on the Green London Thornton Butterworth 1935 OCLC 5728619 Pigeon Pie London Hamish Hamilton 1940 OCLC 709966771 162 The Pursuit of Love London Hamish Hamilton 1945 OCLC 857990796 Love in a Cold Climate London Hamish Hamilton 1949 OCLC 563596524 The Blessing London Hamish Hamilton 1951 OCLC 752807050 Don t Tell Alfred London Hamish Hamilton 1960 OCLC 757838847 Biographies Edit Madame de Pompadour London Hamish Hamilton 1954 OCLC 432649137 Illustrated edition 1968 Voltaire in Love London Hamish Hamilton 1957 OCLC 459588409 The Sun King Louis XIV at Versailles London Hamish Hamilton 1966 OCLC 229419330 Frederick the Great London Hamish Hamilton 1970 ISBN 0 241 01922 2 Translation Edit The Little Hut London Hamish Hamilton 1951 OCLC 317377443 play translated and adapted from Andre Roussin s La petite hutte As editor Edit The Ladies of Alderley Letters 1841 1850 London Chapman amp Hall 1938 OCLC 408486 The Stanleys of Alderley Letters 1851 1865 London Chapman amp Hall 1939 OCLC 796961504 Noblesse Oblige An Inquiry into the Identifiable Characteristics of the English Aristocracy London Hamish Hamilton 1956 OCLC 219758991 The book includes Mitford s essay The English Aristocracy first published in Encounter September 1955 Collections of letters Edit Mosley Charlotte ed 1993 Love from Nancy The Letters of Nancy Mitford London Hodder amp Stoughton ISBN 978 0 340 53784 8 ed 1996 The Letters of Nancy Mitford and Evelyn Waugh London Hodder amp Stoughton ISBN 0 340 63804 4 ed 2007 The Mitfords Letters Between Six Sisters London Fourth Estate ISBN 978 1 84115 790 0 Smith John Saumarez ed 2004 The Bookshop at 10 Curzon Street Letters between Nancy Mitford and Heywood Hill 1952 73 London Frances Lincoln ISBN 978 0 7112 2452 0 Other works Edit Mitford was a prolific writer of articles reviews essays and prefaces some of which were published in two collections The Water Beetle Hamish Hamilton 1962 and A Talent to Annoy Hamish Hamilton 1986 Her translation of Madame Lafayette s romantic novel La Princesse de Cleves was published in America in 1950 but was heavily criticised 163 References EditInformational notes Although Freeman Mitford was the family s surname after 1886 neither Nancy nor her siblings appear to have used it outside formal documents All Nancy s published work bears the name Mitford she specified the name Mitford in her CBE citation and her gravestone bears the shortened name 1 2 Mary Soames daughter of Clementine and Winston Churchill considers the most likely father of Clementine to have been William George Bay Middleton 1846 92 a Scottish landowner horseman and possible lover of Empress Elizabeth of Austria Soames suggests that Bertie Mitford may have been the father of Nellie Clementine s younger sister 10 William Mitford s brother John Freeman Mitford Speaker of the House of Commons and Lord Chancellor of Ireland had been ennobled as Baron Redesdale in 1802 The title had lapsed on the death of the first Baron s son 12 13 A sixth daughter Deborah was born in 1920 Hastings has recorded Lord Redesdale s disappointment that this final child was yet another girl he had hoped for another son 30 Esmond Romilly was the son of Nellie Clementine Churchill s younger sister but rumours suggested that Romilly was actually the product of an affair between his mother and her brother in law Winston Churchill There was a distinct physical resemblance between the young Churchill and Romilly In his biography of Romilly Kevin Ingram rejects the suggestion of Churchill s paternity as unfounded possibly invented by Nancy as a tease 67 68 In May 1940 after Hitler s invasion of the Low Countries Esmond Romilly joined the Royal Canadian Air Force and after training as an observer was commissioned as a pilot officer He was killed in November 1941 in the course of a bombing raid on Hamburg 69 Although she made a partial recovery and lived a further nine years the damage to Unity was permanent The bullet proved impossible to remove and eventually caused a fatal attack of meningitis 79 Diana was unaware of Nancy s role in her imprisonment until many years after the war Both remained on affectionate terms during the remainder of Nancy s lifetime However in a television programme in 2001 Diana described her sister as the most disloyal person I ever knew 82 83 The shop had been founded in 1936 by G Heywood Hill Mitford later bought a partnership in the business her share was eventually passed to her nephew the Duke of Devonshire Between 1995 and 2004 the shop sponsored a literary prize which it revived in 2011 in a revised form to mark the bookshop s 75th anniversary 89 Tom strongly pro German had requested that he be sent to Burma to fight the Japanese rather than to fight against Germans 94 Rodd and Mitford were divorced in 1957 and he died in 1968 98 An article in Language the journal of the Linguistic Society of America complained that too much of the original Ross article had been omitted including everything related to pronunciation 117 The terms U and Non U entered the language permanently Thompson argues that the notoriety associated with Noblesse Oblige came to haunt Mitford partly by branding her in some eyes as a super snob and partly by distracting attention from her serious writing The Daily Telegraph s obituary in 1973 was headed Nancy Mitford U and Non U creator dies at 68 121 Palewski had been conducting a simultaneous affair with another woman a near neighbour of Mitford in Paris In 1961 this woman bore Palewski s child He assured Mitford that he had no intention of marrying the woman and saw no reason why his friendship with Mitford should not continue 128 Citations a b Acton pp 232 34 Thompson 2003 p 1 Burke p 282 Burke p 286 Wroth W W Taylor J S revised 2004 Mitford William 1744 1827 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 18860 Subscription or UK public library membership required Acton pp 2 4 Hastings p 2 Lovell p 25 Lovell p 533 Soames Ch 1 Forbears and Early Childhood Gosse Edmund Matthew H G C revised 2004 Mitford Algernon Bertram Freeman first Baron Redesdale 1837 1916 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 35048 Subscription or UK public library membership required Greer D S 2008 2004 Mitford John Freeman first Baron Redesdale 1748 1830 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 18857 Subscription or UK public library membership required Sanders L C Matthews H C G revised 2009 2004 Mitford John Thomas Freeman first earl of Redesdale 1805 1886 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 18858 Subscription or UK public library membership required Parry Jonathan 2014 2004 Russell John Viscount Amberley 1842 18769 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 24324 Subscription or UK public library membership required a b Hastings pp 234 35 Lovell p 338 Hastings pp 4 5 Cochrane Alfred Matthew H C G revised 2008 2004 Bowles Thomas Gibson 1842 1922 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 32005 Subscription or UK public library membership required Hastings p 5 Hastings p 6 Lovell pp 16 17 Hastings pp 7 8 Hastings p 9 a b Hastings p 10 a b c d e f g h Hastings Selina 2015 2004 Mitford Nancy Freeman 1904 1973 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 31450 Subscription or UK public library membership required Hastings pp 15 17 Lovell p 32 Casualty details Freeman Mitford Clement B Ogilvy Commonwealth War Graves Commission Retrieved 5 December 2013 a b Hastings pp 22 24 Hastings p 7 Lovell p 42 Acton p 9 Hastings p 33 Lovell pp 51 52 Alexander Mosley quoted in Thompson 2003 p 47 a b Hastings pp 37 38 Thompson 2003 pp 51 52 Mosley ed pp 16 17 Hastings pp 42 43 Byrne p 113 Hastings pp 46 49 Byrne p 118 Lovell pp 107 08 Acton p 28 Hastings pp 56 61 Thompson 2003 pp 94 95 Thompson 2003 p 93 Hastings p 69 Mosley ed p 62 a b Thompson 2003 pp 86 88 a b Hastings p 70 Hastings pp 71 72 a b Lovell pp 147 49 Hastings pp 73 75 Hastings pp 76 77 Thompson 2003 pp 99 100 Mosley ed p 90 a b Lovell pp 150 51 Loraine Percy Rodd James Rennell Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Online edition Retrieved 10 December 2013 Acton p 40 Sykes p 41 Hastings pp 87 91 Hastings pp 92 and 96 97 Trove trove nla gov au Retrieved 10 December 2022 Lovell pp 196 97 Hastings pp 105 10 Ingram pp 17 18 Lovell p 26 a b Parker Peter 2014 2004 Romilly Esmond Marcus David 1918 1941 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 60277 Subscription or UK public library membership required a b Hastings pp 111 12 Thompson 2003 p 127 Hastings p 115 Hastings pp 116 18 Mosley ed p 116 Thompson 2003 p 140 Hastings p 95 Hastings pp 113 14 Hastings p 119 a b Davenport Hines Richard Mitford Unity Valkyrie Freeman 1914 1948 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 58824 Subscription or UK public library membership required Lovell pp 324 25 Reynolds Paul 14 November 2003 Nancy Mitford spied on sisters BBC News Retrieved 16 December 2013 Thompson 2003 p 167 Hastings p 131 Thompson 2003 pp 146 and 151 Hastings pp 128 29 Thompson 2003 pp 160 61 Hastings p 135 Hastings pp 133 41 Devonshire Stoker 3 December 2011 A new chapter The Spectator Retrieved 20 June 2016 Thompson 2003 pp 184 85 Lovell pp 356 58 Thompson 2003 p 209 a b Hastings pp 165 67 a b Thompson 2003 pp 221 22 Thompson 2003 pp 225 27 Hastings p 168 a b Hastings pp 171 72 Hastings pp 204 and 232 a b Hastings pp 173 82 Mosley ed pp 184 85 Acton pp 71 72 Hastings pp 221 22 Hastings p 189 Amory ed p 301 a b Thompson 2003 pp 284 86 Lyric Theatre The Times 24 August 1950 p 6 Thompson 2003 p 279 Acton p 85 Amory ed p 346 Hastings pp 219 20 Mosley ed pp 381 82 Thompson 2003 pp 287 88 Ross Alan S C 1954 Linguistic Class Indicators in Present day English PDF Neuphilologische Mitteilungen 113 49 Archived from the original PDF on 19 August 2017 a b Hastings pp 223 25 Mitford Nancy September 1955 The English Aristocracy Encounter 11 15 a b Thompson 2003 pp 294 95 Bailey Richard W March 2005 Reviews Talking Proper The rise of accent as a social symbol Language 81 1 269 71 doi 10 1353 lan 2005 0002 JSTOR 4489870 S2CID 143494221 subscription required Waugh Evelyn December 1955 An Open Letter to the Hon Mrs Peter Rodd Nancy Mitford on a Very Serious Subject Encounter 11 16 Acton p 99 Lovell pp 452 53 Thompson 2003 p 297 Hastings pp 213 14 Lovell p 455 Thompson 2003 p 340 Thompson 2003 p 346 Hastings p 226 Hastings pp 227 30 a b Hastings pp 215 17 Acton p 143 Thompson 2003 p 370 Thompson 2003 p 272 Hastings pp 236 38 Thompson 2003 p 376 Thompson 2003 p 372 Acton p 173 Lovell p 485 Hastings pp 242 44 Hastings p 247 Thompson 2003 p 387 Thompson 2003 p 398 Hastings p 255 Acton p 25 Acton p 26 Blain et al p 747 Drabble ed p 657 a b Cooke Rachel 23 December 2011 Rereading Christmas Pudding by Nancy Mitford The Guardian Retrieved 20 June 2016 Acton p 59 Heller Zoe 8 March 2010 Zoe Heller on Nancy Mitford The Daily Telegraph Retrieved 20 June 2016 Hastings p 129 Laing Olivia 21 March 2010 The Pursuit of Love by Nancy Mitford The Guardian Retrieved 20 June 2016 Amory ed p 354 Thompson 2003 pp 307 10 Amory ed pp 558 59 Quintana Ricardo Winter 1962 Book Reviews Don t Tell Alfred Wisconsin Studies in Contemporary Literature 3 1 81 84 doi 10 2307 1207385 JSTOR 1207385 subscription required Thompson 2003 pp 364 65 Amory ed p 393 Mosley ed p 412 Acton p 167 Thompson 2003 p 413 Thompson 2003 p 281 Walter Natasha 2 October 1993 Review Pursuit of bloody minded charm Love From Nancy The Letters of Nancy Mitford The Independent Archived from the original on 18 June 2022 Retrieved 20 June 2016 1 The Guardian 22 April 2012 Thompson 2003 p 253 Bibliography Acton Harold 1975 Nancy Mitford A Memoir New York Harper amp Row ISBN 0 06 010018 4 Amory Mark ed 1980 The Letters of Evelyn Waugh London Phoenix ISBN 1 85799 245 8 Blain Virginia Clements Patricia Grundy Isobel 1990 The Feminist Companion to English Literature London B T Batsford Ltd ISBN 0 7134 5848 8 Burke John 1836 A Genealogical and Heraldic History of the Commoners of Great Britain and Ireland London H Colburn p 282 OCLC 12579942 Sir John Mitford of Mitford Byrne Paula 2010 Mad World London Harper Press ISBN 978 0 00 724377 8 Cokayne G E Gibbs Vicary Doubleday H A White Geoffrey H Warrand Duncan de Walden Lord Howard eds 2000 The Complete Peerage of England Scotland Ireland Great Britain and the United Kingdom Extant Extinct or Dormant new ed Gloucester UK Alan Sutton Publishing Drabble Margaret ed 1985 The Oxford Companion to English Literature Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 866130 4 Hastings Selina 1985 Nancy Mitford London Hamish Hamilton ISBN 0 241 11684 8 Ingram Kevin 1985 Rebel The Short Life of Esmond Romilly London Weidenfeld and Nicolson ISBN 0 297 78707 1 Lovell Mary S 2002 The Mitford Girls The Biography of an Extraordinary Family London Abacus ISBN 0 349 11505 2 Mosley Charles ed 2003 Burke s Peerage Baronetage amp Knightage 107th ed Wilmington Delaware U S Burke s Peerage Genealogical Books Ltd Mosley Charles ed 1999 Burke s Peerage and Baronetage 106th ed Crans Switzerland Burke s Peerage Genealogical Books Ltd Mosley Charlotte ed 1993 Love from Nancy The Letters of Nancy Mitford London Hodder amp Stoughton ISBN 0 340 53784 1 Soames Mary 2012 Clementine Churchill London Random House ISBN 978 0 679 64518 4 Ebook first published by Cassell London 1979 ISBN 0 304 30321 6 Sykes Christopher 1975 Evelyn Waugh A biography London Collins ISBN 0 00 211202 7 Thompson Laura 2003 Life in a Cold Climate Nancy Mitford Portrait of a Contradictory Woman London Headline Book ISBN 0 7472 4574 6 External links EditPortraits of Nancy Mitford at the National Portrait Gallery London Official website BBC Radio 4 Great Lives Programme on Nancy Mitford Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Nancy Mitford amp oldid 1126653615, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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