John Branston kindly sends me another of his profiles of twentieth century literary figures published in the Morning Star. This is the full version of the article, including some material cut from the print version. Also by John on this blog:Patrick Hamilton: Love and Death in Publand
Was the Propaganda War fought on the playing fields of Eton? John Branston investigates an improbable anti-nazi propagandist inside MI5.
An Oxford Spy

This month marks the centenary of the birth of Brian Howard, the brightest of the 'Bright Young Things', incontestably the most brilliant wit of his generation, an Etonian aesthete and 'new symbolist' poet, who was also a colossal snob who toadied up to peers of the realm, and a drunkard and cocaine addict. So, you may ask, how was such an indiscreet individual recruited into Britain's secret intelligence service?
After all, Howard, the notorious, louche, dandified teen-age protégé of Edith Sitwell, and disciple of Gertrude Stein, is remembered more today for providing the model for Anthony Blanche, the social butterfly in Evelyn Waugh's 'Brideshead Revisited', than for his far more sombre role as a spy in MI5 during WW2. Yet, in Howard's dedicated social climbing at Oxford, his exclusive pursuit of the university's younger peerage, lies the secret of his value as a spy in the highest echelons of the British Establishment.
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