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Books

This diary of a prime minister's wife offers a front-row seat to the Great War

A review of Margot Asquith’s Great War Diary, 1914–1916: The View from Downing Street, edited by Michael and Eleanor Brock. As you’d expect, the cast of characters is worthy of a Shakespearian history play

19 July 2014

9:00 AM

19 July 2014

9:00 AM

Margot Asquith’s Great War Diary, 1914–1916: The View from Downing Street Michael and Eleanor Brock (eds)

OUP, pp.568, £30, ISBN: 9780198229773

When Margot Asquith’s name crops up these days, it is usually in a retelling of the story about her meeting Jean Harlow, sexy star of the silver screen, who repeatedly called her Margotte. Eventually, Margot became irritated. ‘No, my dear,’ she corrected. ‘The “t” is silent, as in Harlow.’ It’s a good story, but apocryphal and, I was always told by those who knew her (she was my great-grandfather’s second wife), quite untypical of her.

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