Splendour & Squalor: Marcus Scriven

In as far as they developed talents, it was to misapply them; in as far as they were aware of their own deficiencies, it was to ignore them…Theirs was, in consequence, a journey of dynastic destruction, completed in single or successive generations. There would be no return, no temporal redemption.

Splendour & Squalor

Splendour & Squalour book cover

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A bleak day in January 1999…an unexpected guest at dinner…an hour of equally unexpected reminiscence about John Bristol [the 7th Marquess of Bristol].

So a seed was sown. It would, in due course, lead to an attempt to resurrect the lives of a number of twentieth century aristocrats who took the down-escalator of life - an attempt made not via the opinions of those who had heard things said about them, but via those who knew them, lived with them, loved them (and frequently despaired of them too).

Splendour & Squalor scrutinises four such lives (two from the same family): these were men who kept monkeys in West End hotels, and rent-boys in Deauville and Kensington; who used firearms with convincing disregard for their own and others’ safety, who drove Rollses and Bentleys with apparently suicidal intent, acquired yachts and helicopters whilst shipping the family silver to California and disposing of Old Masters at auction; who married frequently and unsatisfactorily, and sought consolation in narcotics and alcohol, whilst experimenting with burglary, shop-lifting, vagrancy and fraud.


Marcus Scriven

© Archant, Suffolk

About Marcus Scriven

Marcus Scriven read History at Oxford, was briefly a soldier, then became a journalist, initially for the Sunday Telegraph, later for the Evening Standard, before researching and writing Splendour & Squalor…read more or watch Marcus on Channel 4’s documentary, The Real Pink Panther*, or listen to him interviewed by Philip Adams, host of ABC’s Late Night Live

*Available in UK only

With thanks to www.thepeerage.com

© 2024 Marcus Scriven