A riveting account of the pre-First World War years . . .The Age of Decadenceis an enormously impressive and enjoyable read. Dominic Sandbrook,Sunday Times A magnificent account of a less than magnificent epoch. Jonathan Meades,Literary Review
The folk-memory of Britain in the years before the Great War is of a powerful, contented, orderly and thriving country. She commanded a vast empire. She bestrode international commerce. Her citizens were living longer, profiting from civil liberties their grandparents only dreamt of, and enjoying an expanding range of comforts and pastimes. The mood of pride and self-confidence is familiar from ElgarsPomp and Circumstancemarches, newsreels of George Vs coronation and the Londons great Edwardian palaces.
Yet things were very different below the surface. InThe Age of DecadenceSimon Heffer exposes the contradictions of late-Victorian and Edwardian Britain. He explains how, despite the nations massive power, a mismanaged war against the Boers in South Africa created profound doubts about her imperial destiny. He shows how attempts to secure vital social reforms prompted the twentieth centurys gravest constitutional crisis and coincided with the worst industrial unrest in British history. He describes how politicians who conceded the vote to millions more men disregarded women so utterly that female suffragists public protest bordered on terrorism. He depicts a ruling class that fell prey to degeneracy and scandal. He analyses a national psyche that embraced the motor-car, the sensationalist press and the science fiction of H. G. Wells, but also the Arts and Crafts of William Morris and the nostalgia of A. E. Housman. And he concludes with the crisis that in the summer of 1914 threatened the existence of the United Kingdom a looming civil war in Ireland.
He lights up the era through vivid pen-portraits of the great men and women of the day including Gladstone, Parnell, Asquith and Churchill, but also Mrs Pankhurst, Beatrice Webb, Baden-Powell, Wilde and Shaw creating a richly detailed panorama of a great power that, through both accident and arrogance, was forced to face potentially fatal challenges.
A devastating critique of prewar Britain . . . disturbingly relevant to the world in which we live. Gerard DeGroot,The Times
You wont put it down . . . A really riveting read. Rana Mitter, BBC Radio 3Free Thinking
Simon Heffer was born in 1960. He read English at Cambridge and took a PhD in modern history at that university. His previous books include:Moral Desperado: A Life of Thomas Carlyle,Like the Roman: The Life of Enoch Powell,Power and Place: The Political Consequences of King Edward VII,Nor Shall My Sword: The Reinvention of England,Vaughan Williams,Strictly English,A Short History of Power,Simply EnglishandHigh Minds: The Victorians and the Birth of Modern Britain. In a thirty-year career in Fleet Street, he has held senior editorial positions onThe Daily TelegraphandThe Spectator,and is now a columnist forThe Daily TelegraphandThe Sunday Telegraph.