![]() Bloch takes no sides but is content to take us through a story that is sensational enough. It was a passion that would lead him to the handsome groom and sometime male model Norman Josliffe (later Scott) and a relationship that would eventually lead to his downfall. He would arrive for an amorous assignation, in his formal clothes, lay aside his furled umbrella and copy of The Times, carefully undress – and then behave with animal passion”. Her engagement to Anthony Armstrong-Jones left him furious and did produce the memorable quip that he would have liked to “marry one and seduce the other”.Īs for sex, all of it homosexual (although he enjoyed two happy marriages), we’re told he had a “strong sex drive and threw himself lustfully in the act. His make-believe encompassed everything from believing that he was an heir to a baronetcy that had become dormant in 1418 to seriously thinking that he could have married Princess Margaret. ![]() ![]() ![]() Underlying this, as Bloch points out, was a world of fantasy and, deeper still, a twilight realm of opportunistic and rough trade sex. ![]()
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