Born in
London, England, Evelyn Waugh was the son of noted editor and publisher
Arthur Waugh. He was brought up in upper middle class circumstances in the comfortable
London suburb
Hampstead, where he attended
Heath Mount Schoolhttp://www.heathmount.org. His only sibling was his older brother
Alec Waugh, who also became a writer. Both Arthur and Alec had been educated at
Sherborne, an English
public school, but Alec had been asked to leave early during his final year and had then published a very controversial novel,
The Loom of Youth, based on his school life. Sherborne therefore refused to take Evelyn and his father sent him to
Lancing College, a school of lesser social prestige with a strong
High Church Anglican character. This circumstance would rankle with the status-conscious Evelyn for the rest of his life but may have contributed to his interest in religion, even though at Lancing he lost his childhood faith and became an
agnostic.
After Lancing, he attended
Hertford College, Oxford as a history scholar. There, Waugh neglected academic work and was known as much for his artwork as for his writing. He also threw himself into a vigorous social scene populated by both
aesthetes such as
Harold Acton, Brian Howard and
David Talbot Rice, as well as members of the
British aristocracy and the upper classes. His social life at Oxford influenced Waugh's personal transformation into a
snob and provided the background for some of his most characteristic later writing. Waugh had at least two homosexual romances at Oxford (whether they had a physical dimension is unclear) before he began to date women in the late 1920s. Asked if he had competed in any sport for his College, Waugh famously replied "I drank for Hertford."
Waugh's final exam results qualified him only for a
third-class degree. He refused to remain in residence for the extra term that would have been required of him and he left Oxford in 1924 without taking his degree. In 1925 he taught at a private school in
Wales. In his autobiography, Waugh claims that he attempted suicide at the time by swimming out to sea, only to turn back after being stung by
jellyfish. He was later dismissed from another teaching post for attempting to seduce the matron, telling his father he had been dismissed for "inebriation".
He was briefly apprenticed to a cabinet-maker and afterwards maintained an interest in
marquetry, to which his novels have been compared in their intricate inlaid subplots. He also worked as a journalist, before he published his first novel in 1928,
Decline and Fall. The title is from
Gibbon, but whereas Gibbon charted the bankruptcy and dissolution of
Rome, Waugh's was a witty account of quite a different sort of dissolution, following the career of the harmless Paul Pennyfeather, a student of
divinity, as he is accidentally expelled from Oxford for indecency ("I expect you'll be becoming a schoolmaster, sir," says the College porter to Paul, "That's what most of the gentlemen does, sir, that gets sent down for indecent behaviour") and enters into the worlds of schoolmastering, high society, and the
white slave trade. Other novels about England's "
bright young things" followed, and all were well received by both critics and the general public.
Waugh entered into a brief, unhappy marriage in 1928 to the Hon. Evelyn Gardner. (Their friends called them He-Evelyn and She-Evelyn.) Gardner's infidelity would provide the background for Waugh's novel
A Handful of Dust. The marriage ended in divorce in 1930. Waugh converted to Catholicism and, after his marriage was annulled by the Church, he married Laura Herbert, a Catholic, daughter of
Aubrey Herbert, and granddaughter of
Henry Herbert, 4th Earl of Carnarvon. This marriage was successful, lasting the rest of his life, producing seven children. His son
Auberon Waugh followed in his footsteps as a notable writer and journalist.