Sykes began mixing with London's great and good and became a
connoisseur of books, china and furniture. He became a close friend of
Edward VII, then
Prince of Wales, who—because of his great height—called Sykes the "Great Xtopher" (pronounced 'Christopher'). Sykes entertained the Prince and Princess Alexandra of Wales in great splendour at
Brantingham Thorpe, his country house in Yorkshire, the
Doncaster Races, and his London home in
Berkeley Square. One night, at the Marlborough Club, the Prince—who hated the vice of drunkenness—poured a glass of brandy over the inebriated Sykes's head; the latter's only response was to bow and say "As your Royal Highness pleases". This performance was repeated subsequently, "dutifully obliged" by the "complicit" Sykes, to the sycophantic appreciation of courtiers present. However, Sykes's lavish entertainment of the
Marlborough House set and the Prince of Wales "dissipated much of his fortune". In the late 1880s he was compelled to take out large loans which led to a long-running dispute with his solicitor and parliamentary agent eventually settled in the
Court of Chancery. Brantingham Thorpe was let from 1887. The estate in which he held a life interest reverted on his death to trustees of his father who sold it in 1899 to the then tenant of the house. Ridley observes of Sykes' near-bankruptcy in attendance on the Prince that "if Sykes was a victim, Bertie was an unwitting oppressor; he had nothing but pity for his old friend, he visited him in London and he wrote to
Tatton Sykes imploring him to provide for his brother". Previously, the Prince, having for years stayed with Sykes for the Doncaster races, chose to stay elsewhere in consideration of Sykes's reduced circumstances, saying "I do not wish him ... to spend a farthing on my account—I shall be furious if he gives me a birthday present!" After Sykes' death in 1898, the Prince of Wales installed a tablet to his memory at
Westminster Abbey. ==References==