Fame and fortune Brideshead Revisited was published in London in May 1945. Waugh had been convinced of the book's qualities, "my first novel rather than my last". It was a tremendous success, bringing its author fame, fortune and literary status. Although he took momentary pleasure from the defeat of
Winston Churchill and his
Conservatives in the
1945 general election, he saw the accession to power of the
Labour Party as a triumph of barbarism and the onset of a new "Dark Age". but spent much of the next seven years either in London, or travelling. In March 1946, he visited the
Nuremberg trials, and later that year, he was in Spain for a celebration of the 400th anniversary of the death of
Francisco de Vitoria, said to be the founder of
international law. Waugh wrote up his experiences of the frustrations of postwar European travel in a novella, ''
Scott-King's Modern Europe. In February 1947, he made the first of several trips to the United States, in the first instance to discuss filming of Brideshead
. The project collapsed, but Waugh used his time in Hollywood to visit the Forest Lawn cemetery, which provided the basis for his satire of American perspectives on death, The Loved One'' (1948). and in 1953, he travelled to
Goa to witness the final exhibition before burial of the remains of the 16th-century Jesuit missionary-priest
Francis Xavier. In between his journeys, Waugh worked intermittently on
Helena, a long-planned novel about the discoverer of the
True Cross that was by "far the best book I have ever written or ever will write". Its success with the public was limited, but it was, his daughter Harriet later said, "the only one of his books that he ever cared to read aloud". In 1952 Waugh published
Men at Arms, the first of his semi-autobiographical war trilogy in which he depicted many of his personal experiences and encounters from the early stages of the war. Other books published during this period included
When The Going Was Good (1946), Nearing 50, Waugh was old for his years, "selectively deaf, rheumatic, irascible" and increasingly dependent on alcohol and on drugs to relieve his insomnia and depression. From 1945 onwards, Waugh became an avid collector, particularly of Victorian paintings and furniture. He filled Piers Court with his acquisitions, often from London's
Portobello Market and from house clearance sales. Some of his buying was shrewd and prescient; he paid £10 for Rossetti's "Spirit of the Rainbow" to begin a collection of Victorian paintings that eventually acquired great value. Waugh also began, from 1949, to write knowledgeable reviews and articles on the subject of painting.
Breakdown By 1953, Waugh's popularity as a writer was declining. He was perceived as out of step with the
Zeitgeist, and the large fees he demanded were no longer easily available. Shortage of cash led him to agree in November 1953 to be interviewed on BBC radio, where the panel took an aggressive line: "they tried to make a fool of me, and I don't think they entirely succeeded", Waugh wrote to Nancy Mitford.
Peter Fleming in
The Spectator likened the interview to "the goading of a bull by matadors". Early in 1954, Waugh's doctors, concerned by his physical deterioration, advised a change of scene. On 29 January, he took a ship bound for
Ceylon, hoping that he would be able to finish his novel. Within a few days, he was writing home complaining of "other passengers whispering about me" and of hearing voices, including that of his recent BBC
interlocutor, Stephen Black. He left the ship in
Egypt and flew on to
Colombo, but, he wrote to Laura, the voices followed him. Alarmed, Laura sought help from her friend,
Frances Donaldson, whose husband agreed to fly out to Ceylon and bring Waugh home. In fact, Waugh made his own way back, now believing that he was suffering from
demonic possession. A brief medical examination indicated that Waugh was suffering from
bromide poisoning from his drugs regimen. When his medication was changed, the voices and the other hallucinations quickly disappeared. Waugh was delighted, informing all of his friends that he had been mad: "Clean off my onion!". The experience was fictionalised a few years later, in
The Ordeal of Gilbert Pinfold (1957). In 1956,
Edwin Newman made a short film about Waugh. In the course of it, Newman learned that Waugh hated the modern world and wished that he had been born two or three centuries sooner. Waugh disliked modern methods of transportation or communication, refused to drive or use the telephone, and wrote with an old-fashioned
dip pen. He also expressed the views that American news reporters could not function without frequent infusions of
whisky, and that every American had been divorced at least once.
Late works , the village in Somerset to which Waugh and his family moved in 1956 Restored to health, Waugh returned to work and finished
Officers and Gentlemen. In June 1955 the popular novelist,
Daily Express journalist and reviewer
Nancy Spain, accompanied by her friend
Lord Noel-Buxton, arrived uninvited at Piers Court and demanded an interview. Waugh saw the pair off and wrote a wry account for
The Spectator, but he was troubled by the incident and decided to sell Piers Court: "I felt it was polluted", he told Nancy Mitford. Late in 1956, the family moved to
Combe Florey House in the Somerset village of
Combe Florey. In January 1957, Waugh avenged the Spain–Noel-Buxton intrusion by winning libel damages from the
Express and Spain. The paper had printed an article by Spain that suggested that the sales of Waugh's books were much lower than they were and that his worth, as a journalist, was low.
Gilbert Pinfold was published in the summer of 1957, "my barmy book", Waugh called it. The extent to which the story is self-mockery, rather than true autobiography, became a subject of critical debate. Waugh's next major book was a biography of his longtime friend
Ronald Knox, the Catholic writer and theologian who had died in August 1957. Research and writing extended over two years during which Waugh did little other work, delaying the third volume of his war trilogy. In June 1958, his son Auberon was severely wounded in a shooting accident while serving with the army in
Cyprus. Waugh remained detached; he neither went to Cyprus nor immediately visited Auberon on the latter's return to Britain. The critic and
literary biographer David Wykes called Waugh's sang-froid "astonishing" and the family's apparent acceptance of his behaviour even more so. Although most of Waugh's books had sold well, and he had been well-rewarded for his journalism, his levels of expenditure meant that money problems and tax bills were a recurrent feature in his life. He was able to augment his personal finances by charging household items to the trust or selling his own possessions to it. In 1960, Waugh was offered the honour of a
CBE but declined, believing that he should have been given the superior status of a
knighthood. In September, he produced his final travel book,
A Tourist in Africa, based on a visit made in January–March 1959. He enjoyed the trip but "despised" the book. The critic
Cyril Connolly called it "the thinnest piece of book-making that Mr Waugh has undertaken". The book done, he worked on the last of the war trilogy, which was published in 1961 as
Unconditional Surrender.
Decline and death As he approached his sixties, Waugh was in poor health, prematurely aged, "fat, deaf, short of breath", according to Patey. His biographer Martin Stannard likened his appearance around this time to that of "an exhausted rogue jollied up by drink". In 1962 Waugh began work on his autobiography, and that same year wrote his final fiction, the long short story
Basil Seal Rides Again. This revival of the protagonist of
Black Mischief and
Put Out More Flags was published in 1963; the
Times Literary Supplement called it a "nasty little book". However, that same year, he was awarded with the title
Companion of Literature by the
Royal Society of Literature (its highest honour). When the first volume of autobiography,
A Little Learning, was published in 1964, Waugh's often oblique tone and discreet name changes ensured that friends avoided the embarrassments that some had feared. Waugh had welcomed the accession in 1958 of
Pope John XXIII and wrote an appreciative tribute on the pope's death in 1963. However, he became increasingly concerned by the decisions emerging from the
Second Vatican Council, which was convened by Pope John in October 1962 and continued under his successor,
Pope Paul VI, until 1965. Waugh, a staunch opponent of Church reform, was particularly distressed by the replacement of the universal
Latin Mass with the
vernacular. In a
Spectator article of 23 November 1962, he argued the case against change in a manner described by a later commentator as "sharp-edged reasonableness". He wrote to Nancy Mitford that "the buggering up of the Church is a deep sorrow to me .... We write letters to the paper. A fat lot of good that does." In 1965, a new financial crisis arose from an apparent flaw in the terms of the "Save the Children" trust, and a large sum of back tax was being demanded. Waugh's agent, A. D. Peters, negotiated a settlement with the tax authorities for a manageable amount, but in his concern to generate funds, Waugh signed contracts to write several books, including a history of the papacy, an illustrated book on the Crusades and a second volume of autobiography. Waugh's physical and mental deterioration prevented any work on these projects, and the contracts were cancelled. He described himself as "toothless, deaf, melancholic, shaky on my pins, unable to eat, full of dope, quite idle" and expressed the belief that "all fates were worse than death". His only significant literary activity in 1965 was the editing of the three war novels into a single volume, published as
Sword of Honour. On Easter Day, 10 April 1966, after attending a Latin Mass in a neighbouring village with members of his family, Waugh died of heart failure at his Combe Florey home, aged 62. He was buried, by special arrangement, in a consecrated plot outside the Anglican churchyard of the
Church of St Peter & St Paul, Combe Florey. A
Requiem Mass, in Latin, was celebrated in
Westminster Cathedral on 21 April 1966. == Character and opinions ==