Yahoo Canada Web Search

Search results

  1. Violet Trefusis (née Keppel; 6 June 1894 – 29 February 1972) was an English socialite and author. She is chiefly remembered for her lengthy affair with the writer Vita Sackville-West that both women continued after their respective marriages.

  2. Jun 5, 2014 · The surviving letters, beginning in 1910 when Violet was sixteen and Vita eighteen, capture the exultant and anguishing whirlwind of love so passionate yet so utterly quixotic in the context of their era’s bigotry toward same-sex romance.

  3. Oct 10, 2018 · You may know the love story of Virginia Woolf and Vita Sackville-West. But do you know the love triangle? Violet Trefusis's tragicomic novels responded directly to her portrayal in Orlando.

  4. Mar 31, 2020 · When Vita went ahead with her conventional marriage to Harold, Violet agreed to an unconventional marriage to Denys Trefusis, a man who’d promised to marry her on platonic terms. This created the first fundamental difference between the two lifelong friends: Vita loved her husband; Violet did not.

  5. www.violettrefusis.com › en › biografiaViolet Trefusis

    Violet Trefusis immediately sets about supplying financial aid. She issues an international appeal, praising the industriousness of the Florentines and the courage of the mayor, Piero Bargellini. In 1968 she writes her last novel (unpublished) The Hook in the Heart.

  6. www.violettrefusis.com › enViolet Trefusis

    This official web-site provides accurate reference material on Violet Trefusis; to promote awareness and appreciation of this remarkable woman, her works, and all the activities implemented in her name.

  7. Violet Trefusis (née Keppel) (1894-1972), Writer; daughter of Alice Keppel. Sitter in 29 portraits. Violet Trefusis was a writer and a patron of the arts. She wrote nine novels (five in English, four in French), poems, articles on Travels and Art, essays, short-stories, plays and epigrams.