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Mrs. Keppel and Her Daughter

Page 37

by Diana Souhami


  and Violet Keppel:

  in Florence; doge’s ring; first meeting; visits to Portman Square; Violet declares her love; at Duntreath; Violet kisses her; warns Violet to be true; declines her invitation; on Violet; at Knole; Violet’s jealousy; present for Violet; Violet at Long Barn; sex; love affair; and Violet’s probable marriage; Julian and Eve; at Grosvenor Street; ‘Julian clothes’; autobiographical ‘confession’; in France; consents to elope with Violet; Violet’s wedding; tells Violet she has reneged; together during the week; emotional dilemma; they plan to leave England; agree to elope; extracts herself from responsibility for Violet; in Amiens; considers Violet has betrayed her; questions Violet and Denys about sex; sexual jealousy; wants her to come to England; in Avignon; loses Violet’s ring; at the Dower House; reluctantly with Violet; their love ‘debased and corrupt’; telegram for Violet’s birthday; and Vita’s affair with Dansey; refuses to see Violet; brief meeting at Berry’s dinner party; St Loup; affectionate letters; renounces relationship; they discuss writing their story; at Sissinghurst; reluctance to have Violet to stay; Ombrellino

  and Harold Nicolson:

  first meeting; her invitation to; describes him to Violet; unofficially engaged; marriage; his venereal infection; writes to him; love letters to Harold; in Paris; reparation of marriage; cocker spaniel from Harold; he summons her home; her affection for him; reassures him; confides homosexual affairs to him

  works:

  Challenge; The Dragon in Shallow Waters; The Edwardians; Heritage; Orchard and Vineyard

  Salisbury, 4th Marquess of

  Sandringham

  Scey-Montbéliard, Prince Louis de

  Schiff, Jacob

  Scott, Geoffrey

  Scott, Sir John Murray (Seery), and Victoria Sackville-West; wealth; his Paris apartment; death; bequest

  Scott, Sybil

  Sert, José Maria

  Shand, Annabel

  Shand, Camilla see also Parker-Bowles, Camilla

  Simpson, Wallis, later Duchess of Windsor

  Sinclair, Sir Archibald

  Singer, Paris

  Sitwell, Edith

  Sitwell, Sir George

  Sitwell, Sir Osbert, on AK’s Grosvenor Street house; adores AK; and Violet; at Knebworth

  Somerset, Lord Arthur

  Soveral, Marquis Luis de

  Stavordale, Lord, later 6th Earl of Ilchester

  Stephenson, Henry Frederick

  Strang, William

  Sturt, Gerard

  Terré, Helen

  Torrigiani, Marchesa

  Trefusis, Beatrice

  Trefusis, Betty

  Trefusis, Denys Robert, family background; war service; writes to Violet; appearance; suggests talking to Vita; proposes; in Paris; AK and; promises never to displease Violet; personality; interest in Russia; ill; letter to Vita; agreement with Violet over sex; warns Violet; Military Cross; Violet tells him of her relationship with Vita; honeymoon; wants a separation; in sympathy with suicide; indifferent to Violet’s movements; and Vita; sex with Violet; returns to London; to Amiens; anguish for Violet and; motoring in France with Violet; terms for divorce; rows with Violet; asks Violet for trust; discharge from army; Violet’s attitude to; talks of suicide; threatens to dissolve marriage; Sonia and fiancé call; marriage worsens; at Clingendaal; leaves Violet; applies for legal separation; drops legal proceedings; with Violet in Paris; affair with Russian model; and Princesse de Polignac; interest in music; at Ombrellino; condemns Bolshevism; shooting; La Prisonnière; in USA; revisits Belgian battlefields; death; Sonia and

  Trefusis, Kerr

  Trefusis, Mitty

  Vertova, Luisa

  Vicky, see Frederick of Prussia, Crown Princess

  Victoria, Queen, and Prince of Wales; power; and Albert; death of Albert; and Princess Alexandra; and Prince of Wales’s wedding; and Princess of Wales; ‘invisible’

  Victoria, Princess

  Vincent, Lady Helen

  Voigt, Margaret

  Wales, Albert Edward, Prince of, see Edward VII

  Wales, Charles, Prince of

  Wales, Diana, Princess of

  Wallace, Sir Richard

  Wallace Collection

  Walpole, Sir Hugh

  Warhol, Andy

  Warre, Bear

  Warwick, Countess of called Daisy

  Wellesley, Dorothy, Vita and; holiday with Sackville-Wests; her marriage breaks up

  Wellesley Gerald, later 7th Duke of Wellington

  Wellesley, Valerian

  West, Rebecca, later Dame Rebecca

  Wilde, Oscar

  William II, Kaiser

  William III, King

  Williamson, Lady Elizabeth

  Wilson, Lady Sarah

  Woolf, Leonard

  Woolf, Virginia, on Margot Asquith, 7n; and Vita; Orlando; and Leonard; Harold on Orlando; and The Well of Loneliness; in Violet’s roman à clef; on Violet

  World War I, outbreak of

  World War II, war declared

  Wright, Mrs, AK’s cook

  York, Duchess of, later Queen Elizabeth, the Queen Mother

  York, Duke of, later King George V

  Young, Sir Allen

  Zaharof, Sir Basil

  Also by Diana Souhami

  GLUCK

  GERTRUDE AND ALICE

  GRETA AND CECIL

  THE TRIALS OF RADCLYFFE HALL

  Praise for MRS KEPPEL AND HER DAUGHTER

  “Detailed and fascinating … a rich, engrossing study of a mother and daughter who both flirted with scandal.”

  —Chicago Tribune

  “Souhami writes about [Violet Trefusis] with refreshing enthusiasm.”

  —The London Sunday Times

  “… a must for anyone interested in the remarkable sexual license which Edwardian couples afforded themselves.”

  —Daily Telegraph (London)

  “Souhami is an entertaining writer, with a fluent, almost hypnotic prose style … her book is well worth reading.”

  —Royalty Digest (London)

  “A wildly entertaining portrait of scandal and society from Victorian times to the 1970s.”

  —Literary Review (London)

  “Souhami has a Midas touch with words. Her narrative sparkles.”

  —Nigel Nicolson, Sunday Telegraph (London)

  Praise for GERTRUDE AND ALICE

  “A brilliant and witty chronicle of one of the happiest marriages in modern literary history. Not only star-studded but light-filled.”

  —John Richardson, author of The Life of Picasso

  MRS KEPPEL AND HER DAUGHTER. Copyright © 1996 by Diana Souhami. All rights reserved. No part of this book may be used or reproduced in any manner whatsoever without written permission except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles or reviews. For information, address St. Martin’s Press, 175 Fifth Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10010.

  eBooks may be purchased for business or promotional use. For information on bulk purchases, please contact Macmillan Corporate and Premium Sales Department by writing to MacmillanSpecialMarkets@macmillan.com.

  First published in Great Britain by HarperCollinsPublishers

  First St. Martin’s Griffin Edition: November 1998

  eISBN 9781466883505

  First eBook edition: September 2014

 

 

 


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