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Auberon and Herbert
* Auberon Herbert
* Auberon Herbert
Auberon Herbert was his younger brother.
Auberon Herbert, second son of the third Earl, was a writer, theorist, philosopher and also represented Nottingham in the House of Commons.
In 1905 their only son Auberon Herbert succeeded his uncle as ninth Baron Lucas of Crudwell ( see this title for further history of this branch of the family ).
His son Auberon Herbert was an expert on Eastern Europe.
On his death, the Earldom of Cowper and its associated titles became extinct, the Barony of Butler became abeyant, and the Barony of Lucas and the Lordship of Dingwall passed to his nephew, Auberon Herbert ( a grandson of the 3rd Earl of Carnarvon ), who became 9th Baron Lucas and 5th Lord Dingwall.
* Auberon Thomas Herbert, 9th Baron Lucas and 5th Lord Dingwall ( 1876 1916 )
His maternal grandfather was diplomat and traveller Aubrey Herbert, and through him Auberon Waugh was related to Henry Herbert, 4th Earl of Carnarvon, a leading member of the Conservative Party, Esme Howard, 1st Baron Howard of Penrith, ambassador to the United States, and George Herbert, 5th Earl of Carnarvon, the famous Egyptologist who discovered King Tutankhamen's tomb, and the Irish Viscount de Vesci.
* Auberon Herbert ( landowner ) opened up Pixton Park to Eastern Europeans after World War II
In December 1916 also he learned about the death of his cousin Bron, the son of his ( pacifist ) uncle Auberon Herbert, to whom he had felt closest.
Aubrey and Mary Herbert had four children, a son named Auberon who died unmarried and three daughters, Gabriel Mary, Bridget, and Laura, the last of whom married the novelist Evelyn Waugh.
Herbert was thus the grandfather of the journalist Auberon Waugh ( who was named after Herbert's own son ) and the great-grandfather of Daisy and Alexander Waugh.
Auberon Herbert wrote The Right and Wrong of Compulsion by the State.
Contributors included Benjamin Tucker, Lysander Spooner, Auberon Herbert, Dyer Lum, Joshua K. Ingalls, John Henry Mackay, Victor Yarros, Wordsworth Donisthorpe, James L. Walker, J. William Lloyd, Florence Finch Kelly, Voltairine de Cleyre, Steven T. Byington, John Beverley Robinson, Jo Labadie, Lillian Harman, and Henry Appleton.
# REDIRECT Auberon Herbert

Auberon and
* 2001 Auberon Waugh, British author and journalist ( b. 1939 )
* 1939 Auberon Waugh, English author ( d. 2001 )
* Auberon Waugh ( 1939 2001 ), author and journalist
Auberon Alexander Waugh (; 17 November 1939 16 January 2001 ) was an English journalist, and eldest son of Evelyn Waugh.
Two collections of Waugh's Private Eye Diary have been published: Four Crowded Years: The Diaries of Auberon Waugh 1972 1976 ( Deutsch / Private Eye, 1976 ), and A Turbulent Decade: The Diaries of Auberon Waugh 1976 1985 ( Private Eye, 1985 ).
When the Peter Simple column and the Way of the World column became separate entities in the late 1980s, Way of the World was written briefly ( 1989 1990 ) by Christopher Booker and for ten years ( 1990 2000 ) by Auberon Waugh.
*: The Lost World of the Kalahari ( 1958 ) Auberon Waugh ( 1939 2001 ) described van der Post as the person in whose company he'd most like to spend an evening.

Auberon and ),
* The English writer Auberon Waugh, writing in The Spectator in the 1970s in response to an article Pilger had written alleging Thai complicity in child trafficking ( whose research was challenged ), coined the verb " to pilger ", defined as: to present information in a sensationalist manner to reach a foregone conclusion.
However, she has also shown genuine affection and emotion, even if she tries to hide it: when her affair with Tamlin leaves her with a human son ( possibly the powerful magician Timothy Hunter ), she is devastated to have to send him to Earth to keep the secret of her nature and her affair from the King and risks sending her entire realm to war against Hell to protect her son with Auberon from being kept in Hell as payment of Faerie's tithe to the demons.
Between 1988 and 1990 he wrote the Daily Telegraph ` s The Way of the World column ( a satirical column originated by Michael Wharton ), and in 1990 swapped places with Auberon Waugh to become a weekly columnist on The Sunday Telegraph, where he has remained to this day.
Noting similarities between George's novel Children of the Morning ( 1926 ) and William Golding's celebrated Lord of the Flies ( 1954 ), Auberon Waugh suggested that George's work may have subliminally influenced Golding, although the latter denied having read it.
After Auberon Waugh changed Gale's name in the published list of contributors to either " Lunchtime O ' Booze " or " Lunchtime O ' Gale " ( accounts vary, but " Lunchtime O ' Booze " is the Private Eye term for the archetypal drunken journalist ), Waugh was sacked from The Spectator by its then editor Nigel Lawson.

Auberon and for
) This large scale excursion into the use of colour was good practice for the monthly colour covers he created for the Literary Review when Auberon Waugh became its editor in the late 80s.
From 1958 to 1990, he was a regular reviewer for The Daily Telegraph, resigning after a vitriolic personal attack on him by Auberon Waugh appeared in that newspaper.
Perhaps because of her own infidelity, Titania was quick to assume that Auberon was equally unfaithful although no evidence of this was ever shown, and conversely Auberon was shown to maintain strong affection for his wife even in the face of her reputation, even regularly disguising himself as a maid to be with his queen without enduring her scorn.
Maybe then I would not have been described by some witty journalist as having ' a good face for radio ' or be told by the late Auberon Waugh that I was ' too fat to be an MP '.
Grubb has also authored The Memoirs of Auberon of Faerie for R. Talsorian Games and was one of the authors of the D20 Warcraft: The Roleplaying Game for Sword & Sorcery Studios.
The Tobacco Advisory Council of the UK organised for a pro-smoking book to be ghosted for either Bernard Levin or Auberon Waugh.
Press obituaries were lengthy, and the headline " Auberon Waugh dies " was printed on the placards for the day's London Evening Standard.
As an undergraduate, she wrote for Isis, the university's literary magazine, to which she contributed interviews with the columnist Auberon Waugh and the actor Dudley Moore.
Marshall was also a newspaper and magazine columnist, writing for The Sunday Telegraph in the 1970s and 1980s, and enjoying an association with the New Statesman that began in 1935 when he wrote his first of many Christmas reviews of books for girls, and ended in 1981 when he was sacked from its " First Person " column by editor Bruce Page ,-and which he had been writing since January 1976, having been asked by then editor Anthony Howard to replace Auberon Waugh who had gone to the Spectator-allegedly for being overtly sympathetic to Margaret Thatcher.
The dreary succession of randomly selected Kings of England is broken up when Auberon Quin, who cares for nothing but a good joke, is chosen.
Max uncovered secret activity by MI5 within the store, and programmed to be a patriotic computer, offered the 13th floor's services to MI5 for purposes such as interrogation, and even created a pocket-size version of himself, Minimax, to go on spy missions accompanied by the ( hypnotized ) local MI5 director, Auberon Hedges.
After he published a translation of Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn's Cancer Ward, an article by Auberon Waugh in Private Eye in 1971 suggested Bethell had published the work without permission, and had enabled the Soviet authorities to arrest Solzhenitsyn for circulating anti-Soviet propaganda.
Britain's principal literary monthly, the magazine was edited for fourteen years by veteran journalist Auberon Waugh.

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