William Beckford had two lives: one real and sensational, the other
an elegant forgery he invented in retirement after the young
Disraeli mischievously sent him a homoerotic epic based loosely on
Beckford's own career. Biographers have been bemused by Beckford's
faked letters and dream encounters with celebrities, but his real
life was far more significant: he is the pivotal Romantic between
Horace Walpole and Byron.
Beckford was reared in exotic isolation in a Palladian palace
where he grew up obsessed with dark grottoes, towers and images of
the living dead. Rushed into marriage by an apprehensive mother, he
indulged his actual passions (both legal and paedophile) until a
Tory administration staged a sex scandal that exiled him. In his
absence his novel, Vathek was treacherously pirated. Returned to
England, Beckford flung his wealth into the creation of Fonthill
Abbey, which, by its shadowy vistas and glamorous camp furnishings,
paved the way for the wildest excesses of Victorian taste.