VERNON LEE (1856-1935)
Vernon Lee (née Violet Paget), only daughter of Matilda and Henry Ferguson Paget,
was born in Chateau St Léonard, near Boulogne-sur-Mer on 14 October 1856.
Respectable, though by no means rich, the family led a peripatetic existence in
France, Germany, Switzerland, and Italy, before settling in Florence in 1873.
They moved into Lee’s final home, Villa Il Palmerino in Maiano, in 1889.
While Lee’s early education was irregular, the family’s nomadic lifestyle
cultivated her fluency in European languages. Swiss and German governesses
played their part, but it was her mother and only brother, the poet Eugene
Lee-Hamilton (1845-1907), who became her most influential tutors. She received
instruction based on textbooks from Matilda’s own youth and contemporary
reading, and her introduction to music was equally dependent on her mother’s
tastes, determining Lee’s later investment in the opera and musical traditions
of the eighteenth century. Eugene also took a significant interest in his
younger sister’s tuition. Letters exchanged in the 1860s and 70s show that Lee’s
essay-like missives were carefully corrected by Eugene, and that he frequently
advised his mother on her academic development.
Vernon Lee’s cultural imagination blossomed in Rome during the winter of 1868-69
when the Pagets became friends with the family of American artist [John Singer Sargent](#JSA) (1856-1925). Accompanied by
Sargent’s mother, Mary, Lee visited museums and the opera; heard music in the
Papal chapel; and experienced a new social world. For Lee, Mary Sargent was the
“high priestess” of that “Spirit of Localities” (Lee, The
Sentimental Traveller, 20). Her affinity with the historical and
mythic qualities of place became a significant feature of the travel writing Lee
returned to throughout her life; one sees this in works such as Genius Loci: Notes on Places (1899), The Enchanted Woods (1905), The
Spirit of Rome (1906 ), The Sentimental
Traveller (1908), The Tower of Mirrors
(1914), and The Golden Keys (1925). Most of these
travel volumes were published by [John Lane](#JLA) (1854-1925)
at the Bodley Head with whom Lee developed a longstanding professional
relationship that began in 1904 with the publication of Hortus Vitae: Essays on the Gardening of Life and ended in 1929 with
A Vernon Lee Anthology.
Despite, or perhaps because of, the idiosyncratic nature of Vernon Lee’s formal
education, Matilda Paget had high expectations for her daughter. Precocious and
gifted, Lee did not disappoint. At the age of 13 she published a short story,
“Les aventures d’une pièce de monnaie,” in La
famille, a Lausanne periodical , and in 1875 she published a series of
critical articles on women novelists in La Rivista
Europea. It is in the late 1870s that she adopted the androgynous
pseudonym “Vernon Lee” under which she came to public attention in 1880 with
Studies of the Eighteenth Century in Italy, a
highly acclaimed discussion of the Italian literature, music, and drama of the
period and its place in European culture.
It is also in 1880 that Lee first met the poet Mary Robinson (1857-1944) with
whom she developed a romantic friendship that lasted until Mary married in 1887.
Writing of her visit to Lee’s home in Florence, Mary comments on the range of
visitors to “Casa Paget” (Robinson, 935); they included writers, artists, and
diplomats from a variety of countries including Britain, France, Russia, Spain,
and Italy, providing a flavour of the cosmopolitan circles in which the family
moved. In 1881, Lee in turn visited Mary in London. Here she met many of the
Robinsons’ friends and acquaintances including the Burne-Joneses, [Edmund Gosse](#EGO) (1849-1928), the Morrises, the Rossettis,
and [Oscar Wilde](#OWI) (1854-1900). That same year she met
[Walter Pater](#WPA) (1839-1894), with whom she became
friends and corresponded until he died in 1894. The impact of Pater’s Studies in
the History of the Renaissance (1873) on Lee’s work
is evident in Euphorion: Being Studies of the Antique and
the Medieval in the Renaissance (1884), of which he is the dedicatee,
and in Renaissance Fancies and Studies (1895), which
includes her valedictory to him. Nevertheless, her admiration for Pater did not
prevent her from satirising those coteries of aesthetes inspired in part by his
Studies, members of which were only thinly
disguised in Lee’s roman à clef Miss Brown (1884).
Pater reserved judgement, but the novel’s dedicatee, [Henry
James](#HJA) (1843-1916), wrote some months after its publication to express
his consternation at her ferocious critique of perceived immorality. Although
Lee maintained a polite correspondence with James and sent him a copy of her
first collection of supernatural tales, Hauntings: Fantastic
Stories (1890), he would later find himself satirised as the author
Jervase Marion in “Lady Tal,” published in Vanitas: Polite
Stories (1892). It was an act that led James to cool his friendship
with Lee and to classify her as fiercely intelligent, but dangerous. His short
story “The Death of the Lion” (1894), published in the first issue of The Yellow Book, can be read in part as a response to
“Lady Tal.”
While Lee distanced herself from what she saw as the excesses of late-Victorian
aestheticism, her supernatural fiction is redolent of the decadence from which
she ostensibly recoiled. In addition to Hauntings,
she published two further volumes, Pope Jacynth, and Other
Fantastic Tales (1904) and For Maurice: Five
Unlikely Stories (1927), both of which include material printed
earlier in various periodicals. Among these is “Prince Alberic and the Snake
Lady,” which appeared in Volume 10 of The Yellow Book
in July 1896. While the story takes place in a “rich” and “exotic” realm in
keeping with the aesthetic excesses of The Yellow
Book (Colby, 227), its Wildean resonances suggest Lee’s sympathy for
her disgraced fellow aesthete now serving out his sentence in Reading gaol
(Stetz, 113). Furthermore, Vernon Lee’s early interest in Pater’s impressionist
aestheticism continued to evolve and re-emerged transformed in her theory of
“psychological aesthetics.” She explores this empirical analysis of aesthetic
response in Beauty and Ugliness (1912) and The Beautiful (1913). The former was co-written with
Clementina (Kit) Anstruther-Thomson (1857-1921), who replaced Mary Robinson as
Lee’s close companion from 1887 to 1900.
Lee and Anstruther-Thomson’s collaborative experiments were informed by Robert
Vischer’s theory of Einfühlung, or “feeling oneself
into” an object or place. The term was propagated by Theodor Lipps and later
translated by Edward Titchener in 1909 as “empathy.” An early article on this
topic, “Beauty and Ugliness,” published in the Contemporary
Review in October 1897, led to an unexpected charge of plagiarism
from Lee’s friend and neighbour, the American scholar Bernard Berenson
(1865-1959). Following an awkward correspondence between Berenson, his wife
Mary, and Lee, he eventually retracted his accusation. In the years following
Anstruther-Thomson’s departure from Il Palmerino, Lee became preoccupied by
other concerns, but in 1924 she returned to psychological aesthetics to write a
substantial introduction to Anstruther-Thomson’s Art and
Man (1924), a tribute to Kit who died in 1921. Lee’s important
contribution to the study of aesthetics was acknowledged during a convocation
held at Durham University on 20 September 1924, at which she was awarded the
honorary degree of Doctor of Letters.
Although Lee emerged as a significant writer in the 1880s and 1890s, she
continued to publish extensively throughout the first three decades of the
twentieth century, producing a diverse array of works including a musical drama,
Ariadne in Mantua (1903); the novels Penelope Brandling (1903) and Louis
Norbert (1914); and two works of literary criticism, The Handling of
Words (1923) and The Poet’s Eye (1926). As the new century dawned, she also
became increasingly politically active. Letters to her friend Ethel Smyth (1858-1944) show
that Lee was not supportive of militant suffragism, but she recognised the value
of feminist thought as expressed in Women and Economics (1898) by Charlotte
Perkins Stetson (later Gilman) (1860-1935), which she appraised for The North American
Review. In this review, “The Economic Dependence of Women,” she acknowledged
that Stetson had opened her eyes to the importance of the Woman Question. A
revised version appears as a chapter entitled “The Economic Parasitism of Women”
in Gospels of Anarchy (1908).
As the first World War loomed, Lee penned several articles questioning the
patriotic fervour that was leading Britain towards conflict with Germany. Her
pacifist stance resulted in the loss of many friends. The New Statesman, the
Nation, and the Labour Leader were among the few British periodicals that
continued to publish her political views. When war broke out in 1914, Lee found
herself exiled in Britain, unable to return to her Italian home. Alarmed by the
escalating violence, she joined the Union for Democratic Control, a pacifist
group that included Isabella Ford (1855-1924), James Ramsay MacDonald (1866-1937), Ottoline Morrell (1873-1938), and
Bertrand Russell (1872-1970). British by birth, but cosmopolitan by nature, Lee’s pacifism
was underscored by her understanding of empathy and her belief in the value of
mutual respect among nations. The unacceptability of such beliefs in times of
war led Lee to write The Ballet of the Nations (1915), a visceral anti-war
allegory, illustrated by Maxwell Armfield. In 1919, Lee was finally able to
return to Il Palmerino, where her war experiences found expression in Satan the
Waster (1920). This text includes an embellished version of the Ballet bordered
by a prologue, an epilogue, and her philosophical meditations on the dangers of
that group-emotion which had supported nationalist agendas.
Her continuing efforts to comprehend the complexities of emotion are evident in
her final book, Music and Its Lovers (1932), a study of imaginative responses to
music. But it is perhaps Proteus; or the Future of Intelligence (1925) that
highlights the enduring agility of Lee’s mind. Published in Kegan Paul’s “Today
and Tomorrow” series, and written when Lee was almost 70, it considers a future
she will never experience. In “Lore of the Ego” – unpublished notes amassed
between 1931 and 1934 – Lee writes that she was born too early into a world too
young. Nearing the end of a rich intellectual life, her voracious curiosity
remained insatiate. Vernon Lee died at Il Palmerino on 13 February 1935.
© 2018 Patricia Pulham
Patricia Pulham is Professor of Victorian Literature at the University of Surrey.
She is author of Art and the Transitional Object in Vernon Lee’s Supernatural
Tales (2008), and co-editor of Vernon Lee: Decadence, Ethics, Aesthetics (2006)
and Hauntings and Other Fantastic Tales (2006). She co-edited a special issue of
Symbiosis, “Decadent Crossings” (2012), and has recently published articles on
A.C. Swinburne, Oscar Wilde, and Robert Hichens.
Selected Publications by Vernon Lee
Ariadne in Mantua: A Romance in Five Acts. Basil Blackwell, 1903.
The Ballet of the Nations: A Present-Day Morality. Chatto & Windus,
1915.
The Beautiful: An Introduction to Psychological Aesthetics. Cambridge UP,
1913.
Beauty and Ugliness. With Clementina Anstruther-Thomson. John Lane, The
Bodley Head, 1912.
Belcaro: Being Essays on Sundry Aesthetical Questions. W. Satchell,
1881.
The Enchanted Woods, and Other Essays on the Genius of Places. John Lane,
The Bodley Head, 1905.
Euphorion: Being Studies of the Antique and the Medieval in the
Renaissance. T. Fisher Unwin, 1884.
Genius Loci: Notes on Places. Grant Richards, 1899.
Gospels of Anarchy, and Other Contemporary Studies. T. Fisher Unwin,
1908.
The Handling of Words, and Other Studies in Literary Psychology. John
Lane, The Bodley Head, 1923.
Hauntings: Fantastic Stories. W. Heinemann, 1890.
Les aventures d’une pièce de monnaie, La famille, vol. 10 (May 1870):
233-37; vol. 12 (June 1870): 268-71; vol. 14 (July 1870): 327-34.
Miss Brown. W. Blackwood, 1884.
Music and Its Lovers: An Empirical Study of Emotional and Imaginative
Responses to Music. G. Allen and Unwin, 1932.
“Prince Alberic and the Snake Lady.” The Yellow Book, vol. 10 (July 1896):
289-344.
Proteus: Or the Future of Intelligence. Kegan Paul, 1925.
Renaissance Fancies and Studies. Smith, Elder, 1895.
Satan the Waster: A Philosophical War Trilogy.
John Lane, The Bodley Head, 1920.
The Spirit of Rome: Leaves from a Diary. John Lane, The Bodley Head,
1906.
Studies of the Eighteenth Century in Italy. W. Satchell, 1880.
The Tower of Mirrors: And Other Essays on the Spirit of Place. John Lane,
The Bodley Head, 1914.
Vanitas: Polite Stories. W. Heinemann, 1892.
Selected Publications about Vernon Lee
Burdett, Carolyn. “‘The subjective inside us can turn into the objective
outside’: Vernon Lee’s Psychological Aesthetics.” 19: Interdisciplinary
Studies in the Long Nineteenth Century, vol. 12 (2011).
http://doi.org/10.16995/ntn.610
Colby, Vineta. Vernon Lee: A Literary Biography. U of Virginia P,
2003.
Kandola, Sondeep. Vernon Lee. Writers and their Work. Northcote House,
2010.
Maxwell, Catherine and Patricia Pulham, eds. Decadence, Ethics,
Aesthetics. Palgrave Macmillan, 2006.
Pulham, Patricia. Art and the Transitional Object in Vernon Lee’s
Supernatural Tales. Ashgate, 2008.
Robinson, Agnes Mary F. “In Casa Paget”. Country Life (28 November 1907):
935-37.
Stetz, Margaret. “The Snake Lady and the Bruised Bodley Head: Vernon Lee
and Oscar Wilde in the Yellow Book.” Vernon Lee: Decadence, Ethics,
Aesthetics. Edited by Catherine Maxwell and Patricia Pulham. Palgrave
Macmillan, 2006. 112-22.
Towheed, Shafquat. “The Science of Musical Memory: Vernon Lee and the
Remembrance of Sounds Past.” Words and Notes in the Long Nineteenth Century.
Edited by Katharine Ellis and Annegret Fauser, Boydell, 2013. 73-84.
Vicinus, Martha. Intimate Friends: Women Who Loved Women, 1778-1928.
Chicago UP, 2004.
Zorn, Christa. Vernon Lee: Aesthetics, History and the Victorian Female
Intellectual. Ohio UP, 2003.