Wallis Simpson Was Impossible — But the Duke Was Worse ht
June 4th, 2024. Bishon Hall, Staffordshire. A handwritten manuscript goes up for auction at Rare Books Auctions with a pre-sale estimate of £3,000 to £5,000. Composed around 1978, discovered decades later in a box in Kennallorth, the kind of thing that surfaces when someone clears an attic and doesn’t quite understand what they’re looking at.
The auction catalog described it as an extraordinary and immensely readable memoir in which every passage is quotable. The author was Alan Fiser, born in the slums of Manchester, dead since 2006. For six consecutive years, 1954 to 1960, he served as butler to the Duke and Duchess of Windsor at their home at four root duchons don Paris on the edge of the Bua de Bulon.
His wife Norma served simultaneously as maid to the duchess. both lived on site in the cottage on the grounds of the property embedded in the household’s daily rhythms in the particular way that only residential staff can be. Fiser later served Prince Charles and Princess Diana eventually building a reputation as one of the most sought-after butlers in the world.
His personal maxim was this. The perfect butler sees all, hears all, and tells nothing. He lived by it, but he wrote it all down. Understanding what that access actually meant is critical to understanding what Fischer’s memoirs are worth. A biographer working from archives reads letters that have already been edited by the person writing them.
A historian works from documents that exist because someone decided they should. A residential butler, one living on the property in a cottage, present at breakfast before the performance began, moving through rooms that guests never entered, employed for six uninterrupted years rather than an afternoon, operates at a different level of proximity entirely.
Fiser watched the Windsor before they were dressed. He watched them when they were angry and when they were silent. He watched the gap between the couple the world was told about and the couple that existed when there was no audience worth maintaining the fiction for. That gap is what the memoirs document.
The memoirs sold for £5,600 above the high estimate which tells you something about how many people understood what was actually on offer. And what Fiser had committed to those handwritten pages runs directly counter to one of the most durable stories of the 20th century. So let’s establish that story first.
You need to know what we’re dismantling and you need to feel its weight because it was genuinely very heavy. December 11th, 1936. Edward VIII, after 327 days on the throne, the only voluntary abdication in 1200 years of British monarchy, broadcasts his farewell on the BBC. He says he can’t carry out his duties, as I would have wished, without the help of the woman I love.
He means a twice divorced American woman named Bessie Wallace Warfield. Born June 19th, 1896 in Blue Ridge Summit, Pennsylvania, known to the world as Wallace Simpson. By the following morning, every newspaper in Britain had the story, and the narrative that crystallized over the next few weeks was simple and extraordinarily sticky.
A calculating, cold, probably gold-digging American woman had ens snared a beloved king, manipulated him into surrendering his crown, and walked away with the ruins. She was the agent of destruction. He was the romantic victim. The phrase, “The woman I love,” said so plainly over the BBC in a voice the public had been conditioned to trust, made him sympathetic and made her irredeemable.
That narrative survived 60 years of biographies, films, and television dramas. It received a significant boost from The Crown. It’s still the cultural default for anyone who knows the name Wallace Simpson without having looked carefully at what the primary documents actually say. Fischer watched what actually happened from 10 ft away for 6 years every morning before anyone had performed anything for anyone.

His verdict was different. Before making the case against Edward, the evidence requires one honest concession. Wallace Simpson wasn’t easy. Fiser, who is the prosecution’s key witness, doesn’t pretend otherwise, and neither should the prosecution. He described her as difficult and ruthless. He credited her with impeccable taste and appearance, but also believed she would never have been happy as queen consort because queen dictator suited her better instead.
That is the nickname he gave her in the memoir pages and it wasn’t affectionate. He also noted in what amounts to one of the less flattering aides about marital behavior on record that she continued hosting dinner parties while Edward was dying in 1972. She apparently said it herself in a different register.
I am not beautiful, so I have to dress better than everyone else. That is a woman with a sharp unscentimental awareness of the performance her position required. Not someone coasting on warmth or charm, but someone who understood that her position in the world was something she had to maintain through constant visible effort.
The concession matters because it protects the argument. If the thesis were simply Wallace was actually wonderful and everyone was wrong, it collapses under the weight of every witness who found her difficult, which is most of them. The stronger version, and the version the evidence supports, is this. Yes, she was the queen dictator, difficult and ruthless, running things with a precision that left no room for error or sentiment.
and the man she was doing it for was substantially categorically worse. The prosecution concedes the minor charge to prosecute the major one. So what does Fischer say about Edward? Weak. That’s the first word. Then something more specific and more devastating. He was in love with her 100% of the time.
She was in no way in love with him. So many of her actions spelt it out so violently. Of course, she had a facade she kept up publicly. Read those sentences carefully because they’re doing something important. A residential butler living on the grounds, watching both of them every morning before anyone had assembled their public face for six consecutive years.
That person has access no biographer working from archives can match. Fischer’s verdict on Edward isn’t hedged. His verdict on the marriage isn’t hedged either. One directional performed maintained for the benefit of an audience that included the entire world. She was keeping up appearances. He was genuinely completely in love with a woman who wasn’t genuinely completely in love with him.
That is the portrait from downstairs. Now look at how it got built. Wallace Simpson didn’t create the dynamic that eventually consumed Edward’s reign. She walked into it fully furnished, and the furniture had been arranged over decades before she arrived. His romantic history before her documents a pattern so consistent it reads less like misfortune and more like deliberate structural preference.
the kind of preference a man develops usually without fully naming it because it satisfies something that straightforward relationships can’t. From 1918 to 1934, 16 years spanning the entirety of his adult life as Prince of Wales, Edward maintained an obsessive attachment to Freda Dudley Ward, the married wife of a member of Parliament.
He wrote her 261 personal letters over the course of the relationship. In one from 1919, he described himself as fearfully madly in love. By 1927, Winston Churchill observed that Edward’s attachment to Freda was so obvious and undisguisable that it had become a standing open secret across aristocratic London, which is a remarkable thing to still be noting about a relationship in its ninth year with no apparent resolution in sight.

The resolution was structurally impossible. Freda was married and Edward, it becomes clear in retrospect, required that quality of unreability. Full possession wasn’t actually what he was seeking. Orbiting was overlapping with the Dudley ward years from 1929 to 1934. Edward maintained a simultaneous relationship with Felma Vicountis Fess, Americanborn, married to the first Viccount Fess, moving in the same glittering social world that Edward inhabited.
It was Fess who introduced Wallace Simpson into Edward’s social circle, which stands as one of the more consequential own goals in the history of royal hospitality. When Wallace began to displace Fess and Edward’s attention, something cold and abrupt happened to 16 years of apparent devotion.
Edward terminated his relationship with Freda Dudley Ward by calling her telephone exchange and informing the operator that Mrs. Dudley Ward would no longer be put through. Not a conversation, not a letter. a message to an operator ending 16 years in one instruction delivered to an intermediary. The pattern isn’t subtle and it isn’t explained by any single relationship.
Two decades of his adult life, two married women, in both cases, women whose existing commitments meant Edward was never the primary claim on them, never the center of gravity, always the one seeking access rather than granting it. the same structural preference each time.
Unavailable, impossible to fully possess, holding real authority within the relationship by virtue of the very constraints that should have made them unavailable. Edward had been seeking the dynamic that outsiders would later call Wallace’s control. Long before Wallace existed in his life, he required it. The women he chose were women who could provide it.
women whose position meant he was always orbiting them rather than being responsible for them. Wallace was different only in that she eventually became available. When she divorced Ernest Simpson, when the constitutional crisis forced the marriage question, when the exit routes closed, Edward had achieved the one thing his psychological architecture was least equipped to handle, a permanent, legally total union with a woman who had never particularly wanted to be there.
Academic historians documented the underlying structure. A study published in the Journal of British Studies by Cambridge University Press analyzed Edward’s behavior through the lens of dynamic psychology, identifying what it characterized as unresolved ediple anxiety as the central feature.
The paper examined how parental anxieties, hopes, and fears shape adult attachment behavior and how a man blocked by obsession becomes, in the study’s phrasing, ineffectually childish. A separate paper published in the British Medical Journal titled The Abdication of King Edward VIII, a study of estrangement between an adult son and elderly mother, examined his relationship with Queen Mary, specifically arguing the fraught mother son dynamic was formative in ways that reverberated into every subsequent relationship he formed. A historian cited by the Daily Mail in 2022 argued George V’s treatment of his eldest son had made him a rebel who didn’t have the self-discipline to be king. Reuters biographical summary sourced to biographer Andrew Rose characterized Edward plainly as
emotionally immature and feckless in his private life, noting enormous charm in the same breath. Because charm and self-sufficiency are different things, and Edward had cultivated one at the expense of the other. The History News Network documented the testimony of a yacht steward, another person whose working proximity to Edward, gave him unguarded access, who offered what the publication called a scathing assessment of Edward’s immaturity during the abdication crisis itself.
A yacht steward and a residential butler. No connection to each other from different periods of Edward’s life arriving independently at the same conclusion. The downstairs picture of Edward across multiple witnesses across multiple decades is remarkably consistent. The charm was visible. The weakness was visible, too, to anyone who wasn’t looking at the Prince of Wales and seeing only the title.
October 1936. The constitutional machinery is beginning to turn in ways that can’t be reversed. Wallace travels to Felix Stowe for her divorce hearing and writes letters that historian Anne Seba, working from a newly discovered private archive, would later describe as showing a woman defined not by confidence but by fear.
She is terrified of the court, Wallace writes, not positioning herself for a glittering future as a duchess, terrified of the legal proceeding that the man she is attached to needs her to get through. The British press had maintained deliberate silence on the relationship for months. Fleet Street was observed and cooperative on the matter of royal private life in a way that no longer exists, and the establishment had reasons to want the silence maintained.
Prime Minister Stanley Baldwin was managing the situation with considerable political skill, working the constitutional crisis through channels that kept it from public view for as long as possible. His private position that Edward could keep Wallace as a mistress but not marry her, focused the question entirely on the marriage, which was both politically manageable and personally useful to Baldwin because it made the problem about Wallace rather than about the king.
Baldwin himself understood the specific danger she was in once the story broke. He noted privately that there was a real danger of her being attacked if the relationship became widely known. Oxford University Press researchers archived public letters from the period documenting the hostility that followed once the story did break in December 1936.
Ordinary British subjects writing with genuine fury. We can’t have a woman Simpson for the sentence finishes itself. The scapegoat was identified before Wallace had done anything publicly visible. The establishment’s preparatory work was essentially complete before the general public had been informed there was a crisis.
By November 15th, Wallace had left for France. Edward’s reported statement at her departure, I shall never give you up, was recorded as romance. In context, it reads considerably closer to a threat. By November 30th, Wallace was sitting somewhere in France writing a letter, not to Edward, to Ernest Simpson, her ex-husband, the man she had just legally divorced in October.
She was writing to him with what historian Seba’s research characterizes as warmth with affection with intimacy. the kind of language that does not belong in correspondence with someone who is simply a legal loose end from the past. She told Nest, “I feel small and licked by it all.
” She acknowledged that her own confusion and lack of self understanding was the cause of all the misery. She recognized in the same letter that her life with Nest had offered a deeper kind of contentment, albeit one without excitement or riches, and that she had understood this too late. She was effectively writing something close to a letter of longing to her ex-husband while the king of England was making irreversible constitutional history in her name.

The distance between that document and the scheming seductress of the public narrative isn’t a short distance. She tried to leave. Her private correspondence from this period establishes that she intended to escape the country perhaps forever. The reason she stayed was that Edward had threatened suicide if she left.
a threat she took seriously enough that she told him she was going shopping for hats rather than telling him her actual intention to go. That is the level of psychological management she was performing in November and December of 1936, inventing cover stories about millinary to prevent a king from harming himself.
The woman supposedly scheming to trap a monarch was constructing hat shopping alibis to manage his threats of self-destruction. December 7th, 1936. Theodore Goddard, Edward’s solicitor, makes an urgent journey to France. This isn’t a courtesy call. Goddard has been sent to identify whether any legal path still exists to extricate Wallace from the marriage question before the constitutional rupture becomes complete.
He meets with her. The two of them then telephone Edward together and Wallace delivers her position directly to the king. She is willing to give him up. She will withdraw from the marriage question. He should keep his throne. Goddard’s account of the call is what matters here.
He confirmed afterward in terms that left no room for ambiguity that his client was ready to do anything to ease the situation. But the other end of the wicket was determined. The other end of the wicket was Edward who had already decided who had Goddard confirmed made up his mind to go even if he couldn’t marry Simpson.
Edward was going to abdicate regardless of what Wallace did. The marriage had become his justification, not his reason. His reason was that he wanted out. Had probably always wanted out, and Wallace had furnished the perfect emotional explanation that would make the exit legible as sacrifice rather than desertion.
He signed the instrument of abdication at Fort Belvadier on December 10th, 1936. He delivered his BBC farewell on December 11th. He said he couldn’t carry out his duties without the woman he loved, and the world received it as a love story, and the woman in question had telephoned him 4 days earlier to tell him she didn’t need him to make the sacrifice.
Anna Pasternac in the real Wallace Simpson assembled the scholarly case for this reading in full. Wallace had begged Edward to stay on the throne and let her go, foreseeing precisely what history would do to her reputation once the door closed. Pastor Knack’s core finding that Wallace was a victim in the abdication crisis, trapped by Edward VII’s obsessive love rather than the villain who forced him to abdicate, isn’t a romantic interpretation.
It’s the reading that lines up with Goddard’s sworn account, with Wallace’s November 30th letter, with her private correspondence about escaping the country, and with the suicide threat that made escape impossible. The legend says she trapped him. The primary documentation says he trapped her and used the threat of his own death to make the trap stick.
They married in France on June 3rd, 1937. 5 months after the abdication, one month after Wallace’s divorce was legally finalized on May 3rd, no member of the British royal family attended. Edward became the Duke of Windsor. Wallace became the Duchess. The royal family refused to extend to her the style of her royal highness, a deliberate institutional humiliation that Edward resented, complained about, and lobbied against for decades without ever managing to change it.
The house they settled into for Root Duchon Donten Mo on the edge of the Ba de Balon was by external measure considerable. Life magazine ran photo sessions there in the 1950s. Getty Images documented the drawing room. The Windsor seated among their pug dogs, the room furnished with the kind of precision that signals continuous, effortful curation rather than inherited ease.
An academic study of the property documented the spatial organization in some detail, an interconnecting door designed to lead directly to Wallace’s bedroom. The house arranged around her needs and her schedule in the way that houses arranged themselves around the person who actually runs them. Fiser and his wife Norma lived on the grounds in the cottage for the full six years of his tenure, present and embedded and watching.
20th Century Fox’s production company, the Koigber Company, apparently understood the dramatic potential. Documents included in the auction lot, confirmed they had been in advanced negotiations with Fiser about developing a television series from his memoirs. It never happened. Fiser died in 2006. The manuscript went back in a box.
Someone eventually found it in Kennallorth. The physical grandeur of the Ba de Balone house is worth establishing because it throws the essential sadness of the Windsor exile into sharper relief. The house was large and beautifully maintained and absolutely empty of purpose. Edward had surrendered the most significant institutional role in the British constitutional order.
In exchange, he had a house on the edge of a Paris park, a title he couldn’t use in any practical context, and unstructured days that stretched forward without discernable objective. The British government found successive pretexts to deny him any ambassadorial or representative function. His family maintained a careful, institutionally managed distance.
Official photographs were issued. Actual welcome wasn’t extended. The Duke’s daily existence in these years was that of a man who had handed in his notice without considering what he was handing in his notice from. He had been trained for nothing except kingship and the performance of kingship, its rituals, its formalities, its insistence on deference from everyone around him.
Strip out the kingship and the difference, and what remained was a man of late middle age with a deep preference for being managed by a competent woman and no particular skills in the alternative. Wallace filled the vacuum because the vacuum was hers to fill or leave unfilled, and she was constitutionally unable to leave it unfilled.
The household ran on her standards, her schedule, her social intelligence. The dinner parties, the same dinner parties she continued hosting while he was dying, were her creation and her maintenance. The queen dictator designation Fischer assigned her wasn’t a compliment, but it was an accurate description of who was actually functioning.
She organized the life they shared because he was incapable of organizing it himself. She managed the staff because the staff needed managing. She kept up the appearances because the appearances were all they had left. and letting them slip would have meant acknowledging what the Bad Dealone exile actually was, permanent, purposeless, and largely of Edward’s own making.
Fischer’s characterization of Edward as weak, belongs in this context, not as an isolated personal failing, but as a structural description of the man Wallace was married to. The queen dictator existed in direct proportion to the weakness she was compensating for. Remove the weakness and the dictatorship has no function.
The Parisian years were in many ways the fully resolved form of a dynamic Edward had been seeking since 1918. First there had been Freda Dudley Ward to orbit, then Thema Fesse, now Wallace, permanently his running everything. the gravitational center he was unable to generate himself. The difference was that in Paris there was no throne left to sacrifice, no constitutional drama to provide heat, no romantic gesture available whose scale could justify the arrangement.
Just the house, the dogs, the dinner parties, the life magazine photography sessions, and Edward, described by the man who watched them both every day for 6 years as weak, entirely in love with a woman who was keeping up a facade. Now, to the dimension of the Windsor story that the tragic romantic framing has always been structurally incapable of accommodating.
October 11th, 1937, 11 months after the abdication, 4 months after the wedding, the Duke and Duchess of Windsor depart for Nazi Germany. The trip runs for 12 days, ending October 22nd. The stated justification is social welfare inspection. The Duke presenting himself quite earnestly as a man with genuine humanitarian concern for workers housing and labor conditions under the new German order.
The tour moves through the country with the full hospitality and organizational assistance of a government that understood precisely what the Duke’s smiling photographed presence was worth to them in terms of international legitimacy. Edward had not been king for a year. He retained his enormous name recognition, his status as a former British sovereign, and the implicit suggestion, which the German press was eager to amplify, that he represented some significant body of British sentiment that his brother’s government didn’t. On October 22nd, the final day, the Windsor are received at the Berghoff at Berkiscotten. Hitler is there. Rudolph Hess is there. Paul Schmidt, Hitler’s personal interpreter, attends and records. Biographer Francis Donaldson in her biography Edward VII states that the Duke gave Hitler full Nazi salutes
during the visit. 60 photographs documenting the Duke and Duchess alongside Nazi officials were later made public. The BBC with characteristic institutional restraint described them as controversial, which is a word doing considerable heavy lifting against the visual evidence. Andrew Lowey spent years in archives across multiple countries building the full evidential case.
Traitor King: The Scandalous Exile of the Duke and Duchess of Windsor, published in 2021 at 410 pages, was described by the Edinburgh University Press Journal as what seems an entirely new book in the scholarly literature on the period, meaning Lai had found material that prior researchers hadn’t assembled in the same place.
His own characterization of the central finding is careful and explicit. The book examines how the Nazis seduced a willing Edward, not a passive Edward, not a politically naive Edward who stumbled through an embarrassing two weeks and emerged chasened. A willing one. Lown shiny new books review documented findings that Nazi forces were reportedly given free movement in certain areas connected to the Duke’s cooperation and that Edward arranged through Nazi occupying forces for his French estates to be protected during Germany’s wartime occupation of France, a former British monarch exchanging favors with the government whose bombers were killing British civilians in exchange for the protection of his property. The Marberg files are the hardest available evidence. In 1945, Allied forces advancing through Germany discovered captured German foreign
office documents stored at Marberg Castle, hence the name. The collection contains correspondence relating to the Duke of Windsor’s conduct toward the Nazi regime in 1940. An academic article in the Journal of British Studies titled The Windsor File confirmed both that the documents exist and that their content was sufficiently alarming to require careful political management.
MI5 records examined by wartime counterintelligence historians document what is characterized as a revelation that the Duke had conspired with a known agent of the Nazis to communicate. Conspired being the operative word in that sentence. chosen precisely. Churchill reportedly took steps to suppress the full extent of the Marberg files content as they related to Edward, which raises its own question about what Churchill read when he saw the complete documents.
Operation Willie closes the argument. July 1940, Germany had overrun France. The Windsors were in Spain and then Portugal in a state of ambiguous diplomatic suspension. Nazi foreign minister Yookim von Ribentrop personally orchestrated a scheme to bring in the language of the foreign ministry documentation the ex- king and his consort under German power.
The long-term objective was explicit restore Edward as a puppet king following Germany’s anticipated conquest of Britain. Michael Block documented the scheme in Operation Willie. Andrew Morton covered it in 17 carnations. The operation was real. pursued at the level of the foreign minister of the Third Reich and the assessment embedded in its premise that Edward was sympathetic enough to the regime to make the scheme viable wasn’t constructed from nothing.
Someone in Ribbentrop’s ministry had done the reading and concluded that the former king was an actionable target. All of this was happening. [snorts] the 12-day Germany tour with the salutes and the 60 photographs, the Marberg files correspondence, Operation Villi and the Foreign Ministry’s confidence that Edward was approachable.
And throughout all of it, through every meeting and photograph and document that Allied forces would eventually extract from captured German archives, the person whom the British press was reliably positioning as the Windsor scandal was Wallace Simpson. What had Wallace done that was remotely comparable to any of it? She had been demanding.
She had run a household with a precision that Fischer found both impressive and exhausting. She had hosted dinner parties while her husband was dying. Set against documented Nazi salutes at the Berghoff, Marberg files correspondence and a foreign ministry plot to restore Edward as a puppet monarch. Fiser’s queen dictator charge sheet isn’t thin so much as it is from a completely different category of human failing.
The establishment needed the Wallace narrative and the reasons aren’t complicated. If the abdication crisis was caused by Wallace Simpson, by an outside agent, a foreign divorce with no legitimate claim on the throne’s emotional proximity, then the institution’s fundamental integrity remained intact.
The monarchy had been victimized by an individual bad actor who had now been removed. The entire apparatus of royal grooming, education, and decades of preparation that had produced Edward VIII could be retrospectively exonerated. The patient recovered. The illness was external. If the crisis was caused by Edward, then the institution had spent decades cultivating, preparing, and investing with the full symbolic weight of the British crown.
A man who was by his own private secretary’s assessment in November 1936 losing control of the constitutional situation. A man who would within 11 months of leaving the throne accept the hospitality of the Nazi government and pose for 60 photographs with its officials. a man whose conduct in 1940 would generate documents serious enough for Allied forces to classify them and for Church Hill to reportedly moved to suppress them.
A man whom his residential butler would later describe plainly as weak. The institution had produced that man. That is the harder conversation. Harder for the palace, harder for Baldwin, harder for the press that had spent months maintaining deliberate silence about all of it. Much easier to blame the American woman.
Baldwin managed the framing with considerable political skill. When the story broke in December 1936, his established position, Edward could keep Wallace as a mistress but not marry her, had already centered the constitutional question on the marriage, which made the crisis intelligible as a problem caused by Wallace’s existence rather than by Edward’s temperament or suitability.
The public had a romantic scandal to be outraged about. The alternative framing, a king who didn’t particularly want the job and had been searching for a credible exit for years, was available to historians much later, and interested the public considerably less. Edward’s BBC farewell completed the work Baldwin’s framing had started.
The woman I love, delivered in a voice the public had been conditioned to revere, made the entire crisis readable as heartbreak. He was suffering. She was the cause. The emotional architecture set instantly in the way that simple and emotionally resonant stories set, and it proved resistant to revision for the better part of a century.
The public letters archived by Oxford University Press researchers from December 1936 onward show the hostility that followed. We can’t have a woman Simpson for the sentence completes itself differently for different people, but the sentiment is uniform. She was foreign. She was divorced. She was American.
She had been in the wrong place at the wrong moment in a constitutional crisis that she had, by every documented account, tried to prevent. None of that mattered against the story that had already crystallized. Wallace understood what was happening to her and Seba’s letter research found her foreseeing the verdict history would pass research found a woman trapped rather than triumphant.
The private letters and the private testimony from the people who actually lived with them tell one story consistently. The public narrative told another. And the public narrative won for nearly a century because it was simpler and because it required no one in a position of institutional power to accept any responsibility.
Edward died on May 28th, 1972 in Paris at 77. Wallace outlived him by 14 years, dying on April 24th, 1986 at 89. Both are buried at Frogmore near Windsor, close to Queen Victoria’s mausoleum. The 14 years between his death and hers, are the quietest chapter, and in terms of the argument this script has been building, the most damning.
increasingly isolated in the house at the Ba de Balone, her health declining through the late 1970s and into the 1980s, attended by carers. Estranged from a royal family that had never extended her the HR style and showed no sign of reconsidering it, Wallace Simpson lived out her final years as the most famous villain of the 20th century’s most famous love story.
The title had been built for her. She had no control over when she stopped wearing it. The documented record assembled from Fischer’s memoir, from Seba’s letter archive, from Goddard’s own confirmed account, from the Marberg files, from Looney’s decade of archival research.
It shows something sharply different from the constructed legend. It shows a woman who wrote, “I feel small and licked by it all.” to her ex-husband while a king was threatening self-destruction to prevent her from leaving. A woman whose own lawyer confirmed she had offered to step aside and that the king refused to allow it.
a woman who ran a household in Paris with genuine competence and demanding standards, earning herself the queen dictator designation, while the man she ran it for was described by the person who watched them every day for six consecutive years as weak. A woman taken to Germany in October 1937 to meet Nazi officials, photographed with them in 60 separate images, while her husband gave salutes at the Berghoff and generated correspondence that would end up in Allied hands in 1945 and become known as the Marberg Files. Fiser called her difficult. He also said she was in no way in love with him. He said she had a facade she kept up publicly. He said Edward was in love with her 100% of the
time. He said Edward was weak. Those observations come from the same man, the same memoir, the same 6 years of residential proximity, and they belong together because the queen dictator was managing the household of a man who required managing. She didn’t seize that role.
He handed it to her over her documented objections and used the threat of his own death to seal the arrangement. The establishment took what Edward handed them and used it differently. They used it to construct a legend in which a foreign divorce had corrupted a beloved king. The legend required ignoring what Goddard had confirmed, what the November 30th letter said, what the Marberg files contained, and what Fiser had observed every morning in the cottage on the grounds of the Bad Dealone house.
The legend was much more comfortable than the alternative, which is that the institution had for 30 years been pointing all its considerable resources at preparing for the throne, a man who was, as his own butler would eventually write down in pages that spent decades in a box in Kennallorth, simply weak. Wallace Simpson was impossible.
The man who watched them both every day for six years said so, and he earned the right to say it. But Edward was impossible to escape. He threatened his own life to close that door. He abdicated a throne she’d told him to keep in order to seal it. He spent 16 years before her seeking exactly the dynamic their marriage would require, then built a life she had to manage because he was constitutionally incapable of managing it himself.
He handed her the role that made her look like the tyrant, and then the establishment handed her the blame for the crisis his psychology had made inevitable. She spent 50 years paying for the failures of a man the world called the tragic romantic. Then she spent 14 more years paying for it alone.
In the house at the edge of the bad de balone while the world declined to revisit its verdict. The butler saw all of it. He wrote it down in 1978. He put the manuscript in a box that ended up in Kennallorth. And in June 2024, it sold for £5,600, above the high estimate to someone who presumably read the auction catalog and understood exactly what they were acquiring.
