This book is concerned with that period of English history over eighty years ago in which a king fell in love with a commoner and had to abdicate his throne.
How did this situation arise? Who here the dramatis personae? Against what background did they become what they were? What did the English think of their king? What did the abdication reveal of the social and moral values by which people lived?
Brian Inglis has concerned himself only with the truth behind this event which shook the world. This book is not a search for scandals. It is a careful analysis of the state of the moral climate of Britain during the thirties, and is essentially an objective, though deeply concerned and aware account of a particularly poignant moment in British history.
Brian Inglis was an Irish journalist, historian and TV presenter. He was popularly known in Britain as the presenter for All Our Yesterdays. His publications covered a range of topics, including biographies, medicine and the paranormal. Other books by Inglis include The Forbidden Game: A Social History of Drugs and The Story of Ireland, amongst many others.
This is a long and detailed book about the 1936 Abdication Crisis. It's the first book I have read on the crisis and it is also a good introduction to the political scene just before the outbreak of WW2. Ramsay Macdonald and Neville Chamberlain are well known, but in between them was PM Stanley Baldwin, who is one of the "characters" in the book. Some older names (David Lloyd George) and future stars (Winston Churchill) also make appearances.
There are lots of long detours around the main players in the drama and Edward barely gets a mention for long stretches in the early part of the work. The book looks in detail at why the crisis happened, the complete press blackout on the subject, whether it could have been avoided, and what might have been the alternative.
As it happens, once the crisis broke, the transition between monarchs was relatively straightforward and George VI just took up the reigns and Edward's coronation became his instead.
By modern standards, the crisis seems like a storm in a teacup, and I suspect it did soon at the time with the Spanish Civil War and the military actions of Nazi Germany soon overshadowing it. I've looked at the Times editions from December 1936 and one gets the impression that everyone felt that the right conclusion had been reached. History definitely seems to suggest likewise and the Queen would eventually have reigned in the absence of any children from Edward.
Lots has changed since 1936 but there are still plenty of political crises and much the same sort of machinations go on behind the scenes today.
The preface is intriguing . The book was published in 1966, and the author recounts being an adviser for a 1961 television programme on the Abdication , and though a student in 1936, his memory of the event was quite vague until prompted. So very much subscribes to the view of the Abdication Crisis as a 'nine day wonder' . The book opens in 1936 and the time span got a bit jumbled at first. But when the author found his pace, presented quite an impartial account. Particularly strong in breaking down the different interests contained within various political interests : The author thoroughly depicted what he meant when talking of the Establishment, the Church, the newspapers, the BBC , the Left and the Right et al. The author kept a focus on the US and the crises of the time such as the Spanish Civil War and invasion of Abyssinia . Also stresses that there was what we would now call a 'moral panic' concerning the Church's lack of influence on British life at the time which did not help Edward and Wallis. His conclusion seems to be that the population could not accept Wallis as being both a twice divorced woman ( whose husbands were still alive) and not being of noble birth. The writer also argues that in the long term the reputation of both Stanley Baldwin and the British press was damaged by the fact that the crisis was kept hidden for so long. Brian Inglis did not subscribe to the 'traitor ' view of Edward when dealing with life after the Abdication. Neither did he accept that Edward or Waliis really had any pro-Fascist sympathies, though stressed that Edward favoured peace with Germany up until the London Blitz began . Fifty years on, some potential readers will find such approach naive at best.
Deft interpretation of the dynamics which led to Edward VIII abdication. history, not historiography. The freshest insights in this work revolve around the unfortunate geopolitical & economic stasis cultivated by a politically orthodox ruling class aka Establishment, and the social provenance. Highly interesting to discover the resilience of soft power, when informally exerted from Institutions founded centuries in the past: Oxford, All Souls, Harrow, etc Milner’s kindergarten
Too much about politics. I skipped most of it. It was hard going. I would have liked more of Edward and Wallis. What about their life after abdication. More of Edwards life as Prince of Wales.