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What the Butler winked at : being the life and adventures of Eric Horne, Butler.

By: Material type: TextTextPublication details: Yardley, PA : Westholme Pub., c 2011.Description: vi, 273 p. ; 21 cmISBN:
  • 1594161372
  • 9781594161377
Subject(s):
Contents:
The big house fifty years ago -- My mother made me an Eton jacket -- I go as footman to Eastbourne -- The baronial household -- I go back to town -- Sports in the park -- Life as a valet -- His God was his clothes -- Trials of a butler -- A tour abroad -- What servants talk about -- I become butler to a marquess -- Service with a Russian princess -- The value of a kind word -- A clear conscience.
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Holdings
Item type Home library Collection Call number Materials specified Status Date due Barcode Item holds
Adult Book Adult Book Main Library Biography Horne, E. H815 Available 33111007120849
Total holds: 0

Enhanced descriptions from Syndetics:

A Memoir of the Real Downton Abbey Experience

Eric Horne served as a butler in some of the great English country manors from the 1860s until just after World War I, when many of the families whose heirs died in battle were forced to sell off their homes. Born in Southampton, Horne came from a humble family who valued education. Horne excelled in school and wished to go to sea, but lacking his parents' permission, he instead ended up as a footboy for a local household. Over the years, Horne moved up in the service of the aristocracy: his goal was to become butler to the king of England, a position he very nearly secured. He did end up in the service of several distinguished households for many decades, and upon his retirement in 1922, he decided to write his memoir. Horne is a unique voice; not only did he have intimate contact with his employers and the household staff, he also possessed literary talent, so that his account provides authentic detail as well as shrewd--and often witty--views of the aristocracy, the servants, and their activities. Horne is not sentimental though; he does not think that he used his life wisely, having never learned a true trade. He reveals the plight of the servant class, where once a butler lost his employment--particularly following the devastation of World War I--he was likely to end up in a poorhouse, because employers did not usually provide pensions and servants were rarely able to save enough money to survive on their own. What the Butler Winked At is a fascinating and essential account of life in a country house during the height of the Victorian and Edwardian eras.

Originally published by T. Werner Laurie, 1923.

The big house fifty years ago -- My mother made me an Eton jacket -- I go as footman to Eastbourne -- The baronial household -- I go back to town -- Sports in the park -- Life as a valet -- His God was his clothes -- Trials of a butler -- A tour abroad -- What servants talk about -- I become butler to a marquess -- Service with a Russian princess -- The value of a kind word -- A clear conscience.

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