'We missed you at Chantilly,' Ann Fleming wrote to Evelyn Waugh in 1956, after she'd been to visit Diana Cooper in France. 'Mr Gaitskell came to lunch and fell in love with Diana ... He had never seen cocktails with mint in them or a magnum of pink champagne. He was very happy. I lied and told him that all the upper class were beautiful and intelligent and he must not allow his vermin to destroy them.' Mrs Fleming wrote a great many letters to Evelyn Waugh, telling him where she'd had lunch and where she'd had supper and who'd been there and made a fool of himself. It can't be said that there's anything in them that the rest of the world badly needs to know; and some people might find her tone of voice offensive. On the other hand, the letters were written for Waugh and he liked them. The question that's hard to answer is: why are we reading them now?
LRB 7 November 1985 | PDF Download
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