Difference between revisions of "Vernon Lee"

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She was noted for her supernatural fiction, and wrote many essays on art, music, and travel. During the first world war she was active as a pacifist.
 
She was noted for her supernatural fiction, and wrote many essays on art, music, and travel. During the first world war she was active as a pacifist.
  
She had long-term passionate friendships with three women, Mary Robinson, Kit Anstruther-Thomson, and thr British author [[Amy Levy]].<ref name="lesbian">{{cite web|url=http://www.newstatesman.com/society/2010/09/empathy-lee-moral-study-others|title=You have to be kind to be cruel|publisher=New Statesman|work=Society |date=6 September 2010|accessdate=3 January  2013|author=Vernon, Mark}}</ref>
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She had long-term passionate friendships with three women, Mary Robinson, Kit Anstruther-Thomson, and the author [[Amy Levy]].<ref name="lesbian">http://www.newstatesman.com/society/2010/09/empathy-lee-moral-study-others Mark Vernon, "You have to be kind to be cruel", ''New Statesman'' 6 September 2010</ref>
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She was a proponent of the Aesthetic movement, and after a lengthy written correspondence met the movement's effective leader, [[Walter Pater]], in England in 1881, just after encountering one of Pater's most famous disciples, [[Oscar Wilde]].
  
 
==References==
 
==References==

Latest revision as of 10:26, 21 March 2015

Portrait of Violet Paget by John Singer Sargent
Vernon Lee was the pseudonym of the writer Violet Paget (1856–1935). She was born in Boulogne to English parents, and lived much of her life on the continent. She was the half-sister of the poet Eugene Lee-Hamilton.

She was noted for her supernatural fiction, and wrote many essays on art, music, and travel. During the first world war she was active as a pacifist.

She had long-term passionate friendships with three women, Mary Robinson, Kit Anstruther-Thomson, and the author Amy Levy.[1]

She was a proponent of the Aesthetic movement, and after a lengthy written correspondence met the movement's effective leader, Walter Pater, in England in 1881, just after encountering one of Pater's most famous disciples, Oscar Wilde.

References

  1. http://www.newstatesman.com/society/2010/09/empathy-lee-moral-study-others Mark Vernon, "You have to be kind to be cruel", New Statesman 6 September 2010