Mathilda
Campbell, Duchess of Argyll (née Mathilda Coster Mortimer; 20 August 1925 – 5
June 1997) was a Scottish noblewoman. She was the fourth and final wife of Ian
Campbell, 11th Duke of Argyll.
Mathilda
Coster Mortimer was born on 20 August 1925 in Geneva, Switzerland to American
parents Stanley Mortimer and his wife Mathilda (née Coster). Her father was a
landowner from Litchfield, Connecticut, and her mother was the daughter of the
banker William B. Coster. She was raised by her grandparents in France, then
eventually went on to study philosophy at Harvard University.
In 1948,
Mathilda married Clemens Heller, a professor of human sciences at the
University of Paris. They had three sons together before divorcing in 1961.
She met the
then-recently divorced Duke of Argyll, Ian Campbell in Scotland not long after
her divorce from Heller. They began a relationship shortly after and were
married in 1963 at the Registry Office in Horsham, West Sussex. The Duke and
Duchess had one child together, Lady Elspeth Campbell, born in 1967. However,
Elspeth died within a few days of her birth.
In 1969,
The Duke and Duchess moved to France, spending time in both Paris and Vézelay.
The Duke died in 1973 in Edinburgh.
Campbell
was fluent in both French and German. In her later years, she wrote a novel
called Orian — A Philosophical Journey, inspired by the death of her youngest
son. She also had a keen interest in photography, and once held an exhibition
of her work at the Demarco Gallery in Edinburgh.
Campbell
died on 5 June 1997 in the American Hospital of Paris, aged 71. She was buried
shortly after in Vézelay, near her home.
Good chablis and ‘halfies’: life with the other
Duchess of Argyll
In 1991, Richard Beard worked as secretary to Ian
Campbell’s final wife Mathilda, a bon viveur who unlike predecessor Margaret
stayed free of scandal
Richard
Beard
Sun 26 Dec
2021 08.00 GMT
For most of
1991 I was employed as secretary to the Dowager Duchess of Argyll, the fourth
and final wife of Ian Campbell, the 11th duke. Mathilda was the wife after the
more famous Margaret, the subject of A Very British Scandal, Sarah Phelps’s
brilliant and frankly horrifying BBC three-part drama. Whenever I talk about
Mathilda I usually have to clarify: “Not that duchess, the next one.”
Margaret
always cast a shadow, or as she writes briefly and drily in her autobiography
Forget Not, published in 1975: “Three weeks after our divorce became final Ian
Argyll married again, for the fourth time, to a Mrs Matilda Heller. She had
been in Ian’s life for some years before our divorce.”
Presumably
the misspelling of Mathilda’s name was deliberate. By 1991 the Duke’s first son
from his second marriage had inherited the title and the castle, and neither of
the later wives were regular visitors. The two women did, however, occasionally
speak on the phone.
“Desperately
sad,” Mathilda would say, gently replacing the receiver. “Poor woman, thinks
she’s on an ocean liner.”
“Where is
she?”
“Claridge’s.”
I had this
job because in the days before keypads anyone could walk into anywhere. Aged
27, on my regular route to a teaching position that wasn’t really me, I used to
cycle past the Oxford University careers building. One day I stopped and
wandered in, and instantly fell for a box-file marked Miscellaneous. That
afternoon I applied to tutor Paul McCartney’s son, and for something espionagy
in west Africa, but a few months later ended up on the west coast of Scotland
in a miniature castle at the end of a rutted track.
Mathilda
rented the top two floors of Lunga House, a castellated and turreted 16th
century manor owned by the local laird. She offset the heavy Scottish stonework
with bright interiors and hand-painted chinoiserie wallpaper, while from her
bedroom (in an actual tower) she had a view over the Atlantic to Jura.
By this
time Mathilda was 65 years old, and “famous for serving the best food in
Scotland”. Her face had softened with butter and cream, though her blue eyes
sharpened when she acted out her policy of halfies. At meals, if she finished
her plate first she could say “halfies”, and take half of whatever was left on
my plate.
As for what
she was really like, in those pre-internet days I knew mainly what she chose to
tell me. In her own estimation, Mathilda was whatever Margaret was not. Her 10
years at Inveraray Castle had been happy, free of scandal, and she was pleased
to display the duke’s photo on her many occasional tables. To her, Ian Campbell
was not the dark soul of his reputation. She was his fourth wife, yes, but also
the dowager duchess. Like Catherine Parr, Mathilda was the survivor, loyal to
the new duke (same as the old duke) though she wished he’d invite her more
often to dinner.
So I knew
all that, and then the gossip. Margaret, by the 1990s, was a composite of
gossip – erotic images, forged letters, headless naked Hollywood stars – and
Mathilda couldn’t stand entirely aloof. Described in the BBC drama as “an
American heiress”, I heard whispers that she too was a victim bride. “Pay the
bills,” as Paul Bettany’s duke spits at Claire Foy’s Margaret in A Very British
Scandal, “it’s what you’re for”.
Except it
wasn’t quite that simple. Mathilda had grown up in France with her
grandparents, was previously married to an Austrian intellectual and had a
cut-glass British accent to add to her three other languages. She’d studied at
Radcliffe in Cambridge, Massachusetts, but she wasn’t fresh off the boat.
Perhaps she’d dodged the worst of her husband, and her reward was a contented
dowager retirement in a downsized version of her former marital home.
Partly, my
job was to keep this illusion intact. I was paid 70 guineas a week, which meant
£77 “all found”, including a house in the nearby village of Craobh Haven and an
unlimited account in the shop.
The
original job description was vague, but above all I came for the ghostwriting.
Mathilda had a contract with the publisher John Murray for a memoir, and for
one simple reason: everyone was interested in Margaret. Ruby Wax hoped for a TV
interview, and there was talk of Wogan. Thirty years on, a three-part drama can
still be pitched to the BBC, because photographs of a duchess dressed only in
her pearls will do that. Mathilda was the other woman; she had an angle.
Her book,
however, would never be finished. Mathilda didn’t want to write about Argyll vs
Argyll, except possibly for her success at escaping the press, she and the duke
daring the hills of Provence in a racy convertible Sunbeam. She preferred to
dwell on her sunlit pre-war life as a child, and her evacuation to the States
on a ship with a full-sized on-deck carousel. She was always open to
remembering her married life at Inveraray Castle. The balls, the pomp, the
sheer exhilaration of a duchess castle with the fancy duchess trimmings.
Every
morning, I watched her complicated breakfast go up the stairs to her bedroom,
and then took dictation at her bedside. I wrote letters. We worked on the
memoir, usually the Inveraray section. We agonised over menus, toyed with
travel plans and employed a new cook after Mathilda communicated her hatred of
garnish by throwing anything decorative and green on to the floor. Repeatedly.
Then we’d
pack up and head for Paris, and Mathilda’s flat in the Rue de Tournon. The
magnificent central room contained her bed and a bath and a swing hanging from
the rafters, but our unchanging daily routine included lunch with wine and at
six sharp some iced Wyborowa and games of backgammon before dinner. I was often
politely drunk. We were nearly always smoking.
Mathilda
liked to tell me she was my finishing school, and it’s true I learned how to
open oysters. And to drive her Ford Mustang across the Place de la Concorde at
rush hour, and the correct pronunciation of Inveraray as “Inverarer”. She
introduced me to the great brasseries of Paris, Vagenende (my favourite) and Le
Procope and also the old Nazi favourite La Coupole. Sometimes I waited up late,
so that when she came home from some party I could unhook the back of her
dress, and make a start on the zip.
“Thank
God,” she’d say, “it’s so much easier when there’s two of one.”
But however
hard we pretended, and whatever the heiress situation when she married, the
duchess had money worries. The good Chablis was running low in the cellar, and
the dealer from Christie’s who stayed for lunch left with a rolled-up rug
beneath his arm. In Scotland, the oysters we ate were rejects from the local
bay at Craobh Haven, too big to be sold to the trade. Poor us. I was sent to
Paris on my motorbike to sell a first edition Ulysses.
A secretary
was an indulgence, but I wasn’t really that and nor was I a ghostwriter. My
role was mostly to be present, especially at meal times, like a “lady-help”
from the 19th century. I was the paid companion. So, naturally I judged her. In
the early 60s Margaret had the tabloids to question her integrity. In 1991
Mathilda had me, exuding disapproval as proof I wasn’t entirely servile. With
little else to compensate for the power imbalance (70 guineas a week), I got
angry at Mathilda for what I hated in myself. She was lonely, and wasting her
advantages in life. She was banal. She wanted to be a writer but couldn’t
buckle down.
I felt I
ought to have an opinion, and decided the aristocracy was terrible. Mathilda
was terrible, but – the lackey’s delusion here – without me everything would
have been worse. I wasn’t deluded, she was deluded. I refused to be grateful,
in the way expected of me. I was very rude to Ruby Wax’s people.
And then
one morning in September, Mathilda woke up and forgot who she was. The baffled
doctor prescribed aspirin and rest, and Mathilda sat patiently in her
four-poster bed, the white lace drapes drawn back. I pulled up a chair. Her
long, hennaed hair was spread over the pillows and she crossed her hands above
the whiteness of the duvet. She waited, perfectly serenely, for me to refresh
her memory, to summarise her life.
It was very
sad, so much of it. She’d lost two children, a son from her first marriage and
with the duke a daughter who lived only a few days. Her own father was a
wealthy homosexual seduced in the 20s by her mother for a bet. Quite possibly a
bet made by the duke himself, Mathilda’s future husband, who at 23 years her
senior had once been a friend of her mother’s. A close friend. Margaret had no
monopoly on unsettling and salacious stories.
“You own a
five-litre convertible Mustang,” I said, going in softly. “It plays the
Star-Spangled Banner when placed in reverse.”
I liked to
make her smile. I told her about her easy-going friendships with the artist
Brion Gysin and the composer Pierre Boulez. In Edinburgh, she lunched with the
photographer Brodrick Haldane, and in Paris with the sculptor Joseph Erhardy.
“Nudes or
motorbikes,” I reminded her. “He was good fun, but told us subject was a
problem.”
She sent a
monthly cheque to the ageing poet Peter Russell. Yes, I said, of course we’d
continue to do that. Warming to my task, I reminded her of her rare talent for
liking anybody who had anything at all likeable about them, which was pretty
much everybody. Including me. Her houses were equally open to judgmental
non-writing writers and convicted drug smugglers, and to Steven Berkoff.
“You are
the Dowager Duchess of Argyll.” This was not something anyone else could say,
and especially not Margaret. “You survived your husband the duke, after 10
happy years at Inveraray Castle.” For verification, she could read the pages of
her memoir. Her life had been an admirable adventure, and was definitely worth
remembering.
Mathilda
did recover, up to a point. After I stopped working for her we became friends,
and the last time I saw her we had dinner at the Hotel Continental in Lausanne.
We shared affectionate memories, and talked up the pool house in Vézelay where
she dreamed of ending her days. A year later, in 1997 not long before her 72nd
birthday, I was surprised by her name in the papers.
The funeral
was held in Vézelay, and three of her former secretaries attended, one from
before my time and one after. Despite Margaret’s shadow we came to pay our
respects. To Mathilda, not the famous Duchess of Argyll but the next one. The
one we knew and loved.
Richard Beard is the author of Sad Little Men
(Harvill Secker)
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