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Lord Bath: He'd make a nutritious meal for his lions. That's all.

Thursday, November 4, 2010

Nesta Wyn Ellis' scandalous, unauthorised bio of Lord Bath and his wifelet addiction, Lord of Love, has just been published. For a flavour of the book you can read this as part of a recent serialisation in the Daily Express.

An analysis of soul-compromised aristocratic decadence, it's a must-read: a narcissistic, cock-driven shit stuffed with a sense of entitlement and the self-critical faculty of a precious thug: at least that's the impression one gains of his lordship as Nesta burrows through his modest accomplishments ever framed by inherited (ie unearned) capital Longleat. His only use so far as I can see is as sweet meat (Bath is diabetic) for his lions.

Why would a woman marry such a man unless just to acquire a title, a few servants and a teaspoon of blue blood spunk? The question has to be asked.
Do you find this man handsome?

Nesta's tendrils embrace all regions of his flaky Tudorbethan facade - he ought to be on his knees in gratitude that a celebrated John Major biographer should focus her attention on him at all - and pulls off a decorative effect on a yesteryear zeitgeist figure. She converts him into a useful pathological case study. He's not just cat food then.

I cannot think of higher praise.

PS: The photo (above right) is of a young Alexander Thynne (aka Lord Bath), cover boy for yet another instalment in his interminable autobiography. A writer in comments asks me to consider whether I find him handsome. I would say not handsome, but pretty, period catamite-style: had this photo appeared in an Oscar Wilde bio, as one of his green carnationist admirers in Worthing, only the uniform would have surprised me.

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