Violet Trefusis: Difference between revisions

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*''A Tooth for a Tooth''
*''A Tooth for a Tooth''
*''From Dusk to Dawn'' (last work, published in 1972)
*''From Dusk to Dawn'' (last work, published in 1972)

===Plays===
*''La chevre et le chou ''
*''The Shortcut''
*''Les soeurs ennemies ''

===Short Stories===
*''The end justifies the means''
*''All glorious within''
*''Alas, A lady!''


===Autobiography ===
===Autobiography ===

Revision as of 21:52, 24 February 2012

Violet Trefusis
Trefusis in 1920
Trefusis in 1920
BornViolet Keppel
6 June 1894
England
Died29 February 1972(1972-02-29) (aged 77)
Bellosguardo, Italy
SpouseDenys Trefusis
PartnerVita Sackville-West

Violet Trefusis née Keppel (6 June 1894 – 29 February 1972) was an English writer and socialite. She is most notable for her lesbian affair with English poet Vita Sackville-West, which was featured under disguise in Virginia Woolf's Orlando: A Biography.

Early life

Young Violet with her mother Alice Keppel

Born Violet Keppel, she was the daughter of Alice Keppel, later a royal mistress of King Edward VII of the United Kingdom, and her husband, the Hon. George Keppel, a son of an Earl of Albemarle. Her biological father, however, was considered by members of the Keppel family to be William Beckett, subsequently 2nd Baron Grimthorpe, a banker and MP for Whitby.[1]

Trefusis lived her early youth in London, where the Keppel family had a house in Portman Square. When Trefusis was four years old, Alice Keppel became the favorite mistress of Albert Edward (Bertie), the Prince of Wales, who became King Edward VII on 22 January 1901. He paid visits to the Keppel household in the afternoon around tea-time (while her husband, who was aware of the affair, was conveniently absent), on a regular basis till the end of his life in 1910.

In 1900 Violet's only sibling, Sonia (grandmother of the Duchess of Cornwall), was born.

Her affair with Vita Sackville-West

Trefusis is best remembered today for her love affair with the wealthy Vita Sackville-West, which Virginia Woolf limned in her novel Orlando. In this romanticized biography of Vita, Trefusis appears as the Russian princess Sasha.[2][3]

This was not the only account of this love affair, which appears in reality to have been very much more strenuous than Woolf's enchanting account: both in fiction (Challenge by Sackville-West and Broderie Anglaise a roman à clef in French by Trefusis) and in non-fiction (Portrait of a Marriage, which mingles Sackville-West's letters and extensive "clarifications" by her son Nigel Nicolson) further parts of the story appeared in print.

There are still the surviving letters and diaries written by the participants. Apart from those of the two central players, there are records from Alice Keppel, Victoria Sackville-West, Harold Nicolson, Denys Trefusis and Pat Dansey.[3] The Yale University Library contains correspondence, writings and other materials by or related to Violet Trefusis. The correspondence consists of approximately 500 letters from Trefusis to John Phillips written in the 1960s. Also included are letters to Trefusis from her mother, Alice Keppel, her sister, Sonia Keppel, and several governmental departments in France and England concerning Trefusis's re-entry into France after World War II, and her nomination to the Légion d'honneur. Writings include holograph and typescript drafts of Trefusis' memoirs, novels, plays, etc. Other materials include a miniature case portrait of Trefusis as a child, and an album containing photographs of friends of the Keppels, taken by George Keppel between 1924-1939 at the family's Villa dell'Ombrellino in Florence, including many members of European nobility and royalty.[4]

Probably the most conclusive overview of the whole story can be found in Diana Souhami's Mrs Keppel and her Daughter (1997).[3] In headlines:

Vita Sackville West
  • When she was 10, Violet met Vita (who was two years older) for the first time. After that, they went to the same school for several years and soon recognised a bond between them. When Violet was 14, she confessed her love to Vita and gave her a ring.
  • In 1910, after the death of Edward VII, Mrs Keppel made her family observe a "discretion" leave of about two years before re-establishing themselves in British society: upon returning, the Keppels moved to another address (Grosvenor Street).
  • When Violet returned to London, Vita was soon to be engaged to Harold Nicolson and was continuing a love affair with Rosamund Grosvenor. Violet made it clear that she still loved Vita and became engaged herself to make Vita jealous. All that Violet wanted, however, was to get rid of hypocrisy, especially the hypocrisy of marriage (and all that went with it in those days). This didn't stop Vita from marrying Harold (in October 1913), who, in his turn, didn't stop his homosexual adventures after marriage.
  • In April 1918, Violet and Vita refreshed and intensified their bond. Vita had two sons by now, but they were left in the care of others while Vita and Violet left for a holiday in Cornwall. Meanwhile Mrs Keppel was busy arranging a marriage for Violet with Denys Trefusis. A few days after the armistice, Violet and Vita went away to France for several months. Because of Vita's exclusive claim, and her own loathing of marriage, Violet made Denys promise never to have sex with her as a condition for marriage. He apparently agreed as, in June 1919, they married. At the end of that year, Violet and Vita made a new two-month excursion to France: ordered to do so by his mother-in-law, Denys retrieved Violet from the south of France when new gossip about her and Sackville-West's loose behaviour began to reach London.
  • The next time they left, in February 1920, was to be the final elopement. Sackville-West might still have had some doubts and probably hoped that Harold would interfere. Harold did arrive with Denys in a two-seater airplane, which led to heated scenes in Amiens. The climax came when Harold told Vita that Violet had been unfaithful to her (with Denys). Violet tried to explain and assured Vita of her innocence (which was true in all likelihood). Vita was much too upset and in a rage to listen and fled, saying she couldn't bear to see Violet for at least for two months. It was six weeks later when Vita finally came back to France to meet Violet.
  • Mrs Keppel desperately tried to keep scandal away from London, where Violet's sister, Sonia, was about to be married (paving her way to become, together with Roland Cubitt, a grandparent to Camilla Parker Bowles). That meant that Violet spent much of 1920 abroad, clinging desperately to Vita via continuous letters.
  • In January 1921, Vita and Violet made a final journey to France, where they spent six weeks together. At this time, Harold threatened to break off the marriage if Vita continued her escapades. When Vita returned to England in March, it was practically the end of the affair. Violet was sent to Italy; and, from there. she wrote her last desperate letters to their mutual friend Pat Dansey, having been forbidden from writing directly to Vita. At the end of the year, Violet had to face the facts and start to build her life from scratch.

A few years, and some postludes, later it becomes increasingly clear that Trefusis's fantasy - of romantic love lived to the fullest in an accepting social context - was not to come true. The more traditional concept of an upfront marriage with hidden extramarital adventures on the side—marriage as it had been practiced by her mother Mrs Keppel, and would continue to be lived by Sackville-West and Harold—proved immensely stronger for many years to come.

An essential difference between Mrs Keppel and Sackville-West seems to be that Mrs Keppel took care never to distress her lovers (and their marriages), thus advancing her family socially and financially, while Sackville-West caused broken hearts more than once. For her, marriage was rather the refuge she could always come back to after periods of abandonment.

As a side-note it might appear not so surprising that, notwithstanding some general changes in social context by that time, the inherent unresolved tensions of all three models (of Trefusis, Mrs Keppel and Sackville-West) - including mothers taking sides in view of a socially acceptable solution—reappeared in the DianaCamillaCharles triangle.

The two former lovers met again in 1940 when the war had forced Trefusis to come back to England. They continued to keep in touch and send each other affectionate letters.

Further reading about the affair

There have been extensive writings on the affair. Most reflect that Trefusis was completely engulfed and overwhelmed by the affair, as was Sackville-West, but that it was Sackville-West who was ultimately in control. Philippe Jullian wrote Violet Trefusis: A Biography, Including Correspondence with Vita Sackville-West, which was released in paperback in 1985. Other writings on the affair include the Philippe Jullian and John Phillips book, The Other Woman: A Life of Violet Trefusis, and Mrs. Keppel and Her Daughter by Diana Souhami. [1] Don't Look Round, a book of reminiscences by Violet Trefusis, was published in England in 1952. In 1992, Viking Adult released Don't Look Round in the United States. Michael Holroyd's A Book of Secrets: Illegitimate Daughters, Absent Fathers (Chatto & Windus, 2010; Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2011) devotes many pages to this peculiar story.

Work

Though Trefusis is best known as the lover of English writer and Aristrocat Vita Sackville-West, she wrote and published in a range of genres throughout her life, which spanned much of the twentieth century. These includes diaries, letters, novels, memoirs, travel journalism, and radio broadcasting, composed in both English and French.[5]

During the Second World War in London, Trefusis participated in the broadcastings of "La France Libre", which earned her a Legion d'Honneur after the war.

Virago the Publishing house devoted to recovering the forgotten work of women writers, including Violet Trefusis. They set about putting matters right, bringing out two of her novels with introductions by Lorna Sage and Lisa St Aubin de Teran, but publishers were eventually defeated by copyright difficulties, and Lorna Sage, Trefusis great champion among British critics, died before she could accomplish what she planned. Everything seemed to be ending in muddle and confusion-The confusion being the worse confounded by the appearance of Violet as a pivotal character in other writers' fiction, Nancy Mitford based, 'Lady Montdore', a character in her novel Love in a Cold Climate on her. She was also featured in Cyril Connolly's The Rock Pool, Harold Acton's The Soul's Gymnasium, in several novels by Vita Sackville-West and in the well-known Virginia Woolf's Orlando: A Biography as the ravishing Princess Sasha.[6]

Memoirs

  • Don't look Round (1952)
  • Prelude to Misadventure (1941)
  • Memoirs of an armchair (1960)
  • Instants de memoirs (Gestes)

Novels

  • Sortie de secours (1929)
  • Echo (1931)
  • Tandem (1933)
  • Broderia Anglaise
  • Hunt the Slipper
  • Les causes perdues
  • Pirates at play
  • Irene et penelope
  • A Tooth for a Tooth
  • From Dusk to Dawn (last work, published in 1972)

Plays

  • La chevre et le chou
  • The Shortcut
  • Les soeurs ennemies

Short Stories

  • The end justifies the means
  • All glorious within
  • Alas, A lady!

Autobiography

  • The Hook in the Heart

Later life

From 1923 on, Trefusis was one of the many lovers of the Singer sewing machine heiress Winnaretta Singer, daughter of Isaac Singer and wife of the homosexual Prince Edmond de Polignac, who introduced her to the artistic beau-monde in Paris. Trefusis conceded more and more to her mother's model of being "socially acceptable" but, at the same time, not wavering on her sexuality.

Singer, as Sackville-West had, dominated the relationship, though apparently to mutual satisfaction. The two were together for many years and seem to have been content. Trefusis's mother, Alice Keppel, did not object to this affair, most likely because of the wealth and power of Singer and the fact that Singer carried on the affair in a much more disciplined way. Trefusis seemed to prefer the role of the submissive and therefore fit well with Singer, who, whip in hand, was typically dominant and in control in her relationships. Neither was completely faithful during their long affair, but, unlike Trefusis's affair with Sackville-West, this seems to have had no negative effect on their understanding.

In 1924, Mrs Keppel bought L'Ombrellino, a large villa overlooking Florence, where Galileo Galilei had once lived. After her parents' death in 1947, Trefusis would become the chatelaine of L'Ombrellino till the end of her life.

In 1929, Denys Trefusis died, completely estranged from his seemingly unfeeling wife. After his death, Violet published several novels, some in English, some in French, that she had written in her medieval "Tour" in Saint-Loup-de-Naud, Seine-et-Marne, France - a gift from Winnaretta.

Nancy Mitford said that Violet's autobiography should be titled Here Lies Violet Trefusis, since she partly based the character of "Lady Montdore" in Love in a Cold Climate on her.

François Mitterrand, who later became President of the French Republic in 1981, in his chronicle "La Paille & le Grain" (Ed. Flammarion 1975 ISBN 2-08-060778-2 mentions his friendship with Violet Trefusis under the 2nd of March 1972, when he received "the telegram" informing of her death. He goes on discussing how before Christmas 1971, he went to Florence to visit her as he knew she was in her last months of life: he had dinner with Violet Trefusis and Lord Frank Ashton-Gwatkin, who was a member of the British Government at the beginning of the 2nd World War, at her house in Florence.

Death

Trefusis died at L'Ombrellino on the Bellosguardo on 1 March 1972. She died of starvation, the effect of a malabsorption disease.[7] Her ashes were placed both in Florence at the Cimitero degli Allori (The Evangelical Cemetery of Laurels) and in Saint-Loup-de-Naud in the monks' refectory near her tower.

References

  1. ^ Taylor, Clare L. (2004). "Trefusis, Violet (1894–1972)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. Oxford University Press. Retrieved 29 November 2007.
  2. ^ Woolf, Virginia (1955). Orlando: A Biography. Wordsworth Editions. ISBN 1853262390. In the introduction, p. vii, by Merry Pawlowski.
  3. ^ a b c Souhami, Diana (1998). Mrs. Keppel and Her Daughter. St. Martin's Press. ISBN 0312195176.
  4. ^ http://drs.library.yale.edu:8083/saxon/SaxonServlet?style=http://drs.library.yale.edu:8083/saxon/EAD/yul.ead2002.xhtml.xsl&source=http://drs.library.yale.edu:8083/fedora/get/beinecke:trefusis/EAD
  5. ^ Brown, Susan, Patricia Clements, and Isobel Grundy, eds. VIOLET TREFUSIS entry: overview screen within orlando: Women's writing in the British Isles from the beginnings to the present. Cambrige: Cambridge university press online,2006.<http://orlando.cambridge.org/>
  6. ^ The Laurie Lee Lecture: Cheltenham festival 2010. SECRETS by Michael Holroyd pp 19-20
  7. ^ Brown, Clements, Grundy, Susan, Patricia, Isobel. [<http://Orlando.cambridge.org/> "Violet Trefusis entry: Overview screen within Orlando: women writing in the British Isles from the beginning to the present"]. Cambridge: Cambridge. University press online, 2006. Retrieved Feb. 21, 2012. {{cite web}}: Check |url= value (help); Check date values in: |accessdate= (help)CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)

Further reading

External links

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