Decline and Fall
Subtitled "A Novel of Many Manners," Evelyn Waugh's famous first novel lays waste the "heathen idol" of British sportmanship, the cultured perfection of Oxford and inviolable honor code of English upper classes.Paul Pennyfeather, innocent victim of a drunken orgy, is expelled from Oxford College, which costs him a career in the church. He turns to teaching, frequently the last resort of failures, and at Llanabba Castle meets a friend, Beste-Chetwynde. But Margot, Beste-Chetwynde's mother, introduces him to the questionable delights of high society. Suddenly, and improbably, he is engaged to marry Margot. Just as they are about to say "I do," Scotland Yard arrives and arrests Peter for his involvement in Margot's white slave-trading ring.
Waugh Evelyn
PRELUDE
PART ONE
CHAPTER II Llanabba Castle
CHAPTER III Captain Grimes
CHAPTER IV Mr Prendergast
CHAPTER V Discipline
CHAPTER VI Conduct
CHAPTER VII Philbrick
CHAPTER VIII The Sports
CHAPTER IX The Sports ‑ continued
CHAPTER X Post Mortem
CHAPTER XI Philbrick ‑ continued
CHAPTER XII The Agony of Captain Grimes
CHAPTER XIII The Passing of a Public School Man
PART TWO
CHAPTER II Interlude in Belgravia
CHAPTER III Pervigilium Veneris
CHAPTER IV Resurrection
CHAPTER V The Latin-American Entertainment Co., Ltd
CHAPTER VI A Hitch in the Wedding Preparations
PART THREE
CHAPTER II The Lucas-Dockery Experiments
CHAPTER III The Death of a Modern Churchman
CHAPTER IV Nor Iron Bars a Cage
CHAPTER V The Passing of a Public School Man
CHAPTER VII Resurrection
EPILOGUE