Vernon Lee
-
Standard Name: Lee, Vernon
Birth Name: Violet Paget
Pseudonym: Vernon Lee
VL
's writing career spanned more than five decades during the later the nineteenth century and the earlier twentieth. She wrote critical monographs, essays, and reviews (on aesthetics, politics, and history), as well as short stories, novels, and drama. Much of her work is currently out of print. However two books published in 2003 mark a renewed interest in Lee's life's work: Vernon Lee: A Literary Biography by Vineta Colby
, and Vernon Lee: Aesthetics, History, and the Victorian Female Intellectual by Christa Zorn
.
Connections
Connections Sort descending | Author name | Excerpt |
---|---|---|
Friends, Associates | Henrietta Camilla Jenkin | During these last years many friends, both from Edinburgh and from earlier times in HCJ
's life, remained faithful visitors or letter-writers: these included members of the Constable
publishing family, John Ruffini
, and Vernon Lee
. Stevenson, Robert Louis, and Fleeming Jenkin. “Memoir of Fleeming Jenkin”. Papers, Literary, Scientific, &c., edited by Sir Sidney Colvin et al., Longmans, Green, 1877, p. 1: xi - clxx. cxlvii |
Friends, Associates | Jessie Ellen Cadell | JEC
's friends in London included the scholar Richard Garnett
(superintendent of the British Museum
reading room and future father-in-law of another translator, Constance Garnett
). They met in 1877 or 1878, and Richard Garnett... |
Friends, Associates | Constance Smedley | Their London associates included writers and artists like (besides Margaret Morris
herself) Vernon Lee
, Gladys Henrietta Schütze
or Henrietta Leslie (a next-door neighbour in Chelsea, and with her husband one of the only non-theatrical... |
Friends, Associates | Sarah Orne Jewett | SOJ
had a broad social circle. She belonged to an artistic community of women that included Celia Thaxter
and Louise Guiney
, and counted Harriet Beecher Stowe
(whose funeral she and Annie Fields
attended in... |
Friends, Associates | Ellen Mary Clerke | EMC
's friends included Vernon Lee
and Agnes Mary Frances Robinson
. Blain, Virginia et al., editors. The Feminist Companion to Literature in English: Women Writers from the Middle Ages to the Present. Yale University Press; Batsford, 1990. |
Friends, Associates | Gladys Henrietta Schütze | GHS
also knew and loved the greatOlive Schreiner
. Schütze, Gladys Henrietta. More Ha’pence Than Kicks. Jarrolds. 128-9 |
Friends, Associates | Mary Kingsley | In CambridgeMK
developed close female friendships for the first time. The women included Hatty Johnson
, Clara Skeat
, and Agnes Smith Lewis
. Lucy Toulmin Smith
, first female head of a public... |
Friends, Associates | Frances Power Cobbe | There she met and became a friend of Violet Paget
, who was then newly published under the pseudonym Vernon Lee. By the early 1890s, FPC
had become friendly with another late Victorian writer: Katharine Bradley |
Intertextuality and Influence | Gladys Henrietta Schütze | As a child GHSimagined that a person, particularly a lady, would have to be something very unusual to produce real books. Schütze, Gladys Henrietta. More Ha’pence Than Kicks. Jarrolds. 37-8 |
Literary responses | Rosamund Marriott Watson | Vernon Lee
had perceived something Athenaeumy in RMW
's writing several years before she appeared in its pages. Demoor, Marysa. Their Fair Share. Ashgate, 2000. 124 |
Literary responses | Henrietta Camilla Jenkin | The Saturday Review called Once and Again a great advance upon any previous effort of the writer's. qtd. in Kirk, John Foster, and S. Austin Allibone, editors. A Supplement to Allibone’s Critical Dictionary of English Literature and British and American Authors. J. B. Lippincott, 1891, 2 vols. |
Literary responses | Jane Hume Clapperton | A review by Vernon Lee
for The Academy was similarly positive, calling JHC
's book an important,valuable, and noble production, whose primary contribution was its originality: without being actually original in any separate... |
Literary responses | Julia Kavanagh | In the AthenæumH. F. Chorley
agreed with Brontë, noting that many passages are written with Miss Kavanagh's usual sentiment and delicacy; but we can wish her no better wish than the earliest possible deliverance... |
Literary Setting | A. Mary F. Robinson | The Red Clove, set in Italy, is dedicated to Vernon Lee
,, while Two Sisters, a memory of childhood, addresses Robinson's sister Mabel
. Several poems draw heavily on the world of... |
Occupation | F. Mabel Robinson | FMR
hoped to become a painter, and devoted most of [her] girlhood to painting qtd. in Bainton, George, editor. The Art of Authorship. J. Clarke, 1890. 326 |
Timeline
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Texts
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