
Margot at War
Love and Betrayal in Downing Street, 1912-1916
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Narrated by:
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Patricia Gallimore
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By:
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Anne de Courcy
About this listen
Margot Asquith was perhaps the most daring and unconventional Prime Minister's wife in British history. Known for her wit, style and habit of speaking her mind, she transformed 10 Downing Street into a glittering social and intellectual salon.
Yet her last five years at Number 10 were a period of intense emotional and political turmoil in her private and public life. In 1912, when Anne de Courcy's book opens, rumblings of discontent and cries for social reform were encroaching on all sides - from suffragettes, striking workers and Irish nationalists. Against this background of a government beset with troubles, the Prime Minister fell desperately in love with his daughter's best friend, Venetia Stanley; to complicate matters, so did his Private Secretary.
Margot's relationship with her husband was already bedevilled by her stepdaughter's jealous, almost incestuous adoration of her father. The outbreak of the First World War only heightened these swirling tensions within Downing Street.
Drawing on unpublished material from personal papers and diaries, Anne de Courcy vividly recreates this extraordinary time when the Prime Minister's residence was run like an English country house, with socialising taking precedence over politics, love letters written in the cabinet room and gossip and state secrets exchanged over the bridge table.
By 1916, when Asquith was forced out of office, everything had changed. For the country as a whole, for those in power, for a whole stratum of society, but especially for the Asquiths and their circle, it was the end of an era. Life inside Downing Street would never be the same again.
©2014 Anne de Courcy (P)2015 Isis Publishing LtdComment
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What a lot of ghastly people. I didn't really warm to Margot who seemed to care mostly about what other people thought. Surely if you are rich, attractive and aristocratic, the main benefit is not having to care. I never worked out why she married Asquith. It all seemed rather sad.
Asquith himself was a dreadful man. Lecherous with inappropriate women and girls, living off his wife's money, virtually an alcoholic, obsessed with his daughter's best friend about thirty years younger than him, he would ignore his colleagues in Cabinet meetings to read and reply to her love letters, or neglect his job go for long twilight coach rides with her - this was during the worst of the First World War. He was a man who had suffered the death of one wife and of two or more children, yet he said not meeting his girlfriend on one occasion when the war detained him was the greatest disappointment he had ever had. Why did nobody ever confront him?
There may be books which are more academic than this, but for a total beginner this was fascinating.
Astonishing, depressing, distasteful
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The astonishing Margot Asquith
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De courcy’s best
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Splendid and compelling.
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Margot has her finger on the Edwardian pulse
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The book considers the impact politics and social events such as the suffragette movement had upon Margot, her social circle and her husband Asquith. The book highlights Margot’s gift of accurate description and her own intelligence in understanding the events.
Through Margot’s diaries we beginning to view Asquith as more than just an Edwardian politician and his role within WW1. Instead we begin to understand him as a person as seen through his wife Margot. We are also introduced to scandal at the heart of the institution, of the love affair between Asquith and his daughter’s best friend. An affair which is excused and hidden by Margot and her contemporaries to whom this was an open secret.
I had bought this text as I was hoping to further my knowledge of WW1. This book did not deliver and I do not feel I have any new information. However this did not detract from my overall enjoyment of the book and understanding Margot as a person, attitudes of the Edwardian upper class and the impact of infidelity.
Scandal and intrigue in Downing Street
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Don't buy this if you want to burn it onto cd
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