Firbank is a dazzling writer but this is not his most fascinating work - it is wonderfully frothy and fun but it seems to me to be trying too hard - is a pastiche of Wild? Well I think Firbank is too unique to accuse him of pastiche, but the Wildean touches or debts are too heavy to miss and they range from 'Salome' to 'The Sphinx Without a Secret' and the last is perhaps most pertinent - there is no point to this little jue d'espirit, and though I am not a great believer in the necessity of literature having a point, there are limits to when the glitter of the surface just appears as gilt on gingerbread and not very tasty gingerbread at that.
Maybe I can only take Firbank in small doses, I read this within a few days of 'The Eccentricities of Cardinal Pereli' and I think it was too soon, Firbank is a very rich author and appreciating him en masse my be the difference between relishing an individual piece of rococo frippery and standing in the Green Room in Dresden castle with thousands of bejewelled trinkets surrounding and drowning out all senses.
It may also be that the very setting, a small court of an equally small kingdom comparable, to me, with those of Munich, Dresden or Stuttgart, does not conjure up anything but images of tedium, all those images of pre WWI monarchs in their ridiculous uniforms and trappings all of which reflected nothing, supported nothing, were in aid of nothing except the pointless performance of monarchy that had ceased to have any meaning or purpose. Rather like a recent coronation in a country were most people now have the most tenuous grasp of the difference between the coronation of their head of state and the crowning of a winner on reality tv. Courts and their flummery are dull institutions.
So for me this work is not one I cannot live without, I am not even sure it really deserves four stars, but then it doesn't deserve less, it is beyond judgements like that. It just is rather like a peacock, beautiful, pointless, lovely to encounter but rather annoying after awhile but after a break you will be happy to see it again.