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  1. Violet Trefusis, de nacimiento Keppel; (Londres, 6 de junio de 1894 - Florencia, 29 de febrero de 1972) fue una socialite (célebre por sus relaciones sociales) y escritora inglesa. Mantuvo una prolongada relación con la escritora Vita Sackville-West , que continuaron después de sus respectivos matrimonios.

  2. Violet Trefusis z domu Keppel (ur. 6 czerwca 1894, zm. 1 marca 1972) – brytyjska arystokratka i pisarka, starsza córka George’a Keppela i Alice Edmonstone, córki Williama EdmonStone’a, 4. baroneta, kochanki króla Edwarda VII. George Keppel nie był najprawdopodobniej biologicznym ojcem Violet. Był nim prawdopodobnie jeden z licznych ...

  3. Vita Sackville-West and Violet Trefusis (née Keppel) met at a party in the winter of 1905, when Violet was ten and Vita twelve. From the beginning, their relationship was intense, and the constant travels of both families created the necessity of an ongoing and voluminous correspondence (Vita's early letters to Violet were burned by Violet's husband, Denys Trefusis, on their honeymoon).

  4. Violet Trefusis was an English author and socialite. Trefusis is remembered primarly for her long lasting affair with Vita Sackville-West. Both Sackville-West and Trefusis wrote ficitional accounts about their affair, Challenge by Sackville-West, and Broderie Anglaise, a roman à clef wirrten in French by Trefusis.

  5. Violet Trefusis, rozená Keppel, (6. června 1894,Londýn, Anglie – 29. února 1972, Florencie, Itálie) byla anglická spisovatelka. Je proslulá hlavně díky své dlouholeté aféře se spisovatelkou Vitou Sackville-West .

  6. Violet Trefusis, Barbara Bray (Translator) 3.56. 61 ratings11 reviews. Originally published in 1935, this novel--staged as a drawing-room comedy--centers on an encounter between Alexa, a celebrated English writer, and her rival, Anne, and their discussion about their mutual lover, Lord Shorne, and his redoubtable mother.

  7. ings by Sackville-West, Violet Trefusis, and Woolf, allusive, evasive, and teasing, a figure around whom fantasies and desires coalesce.The tentative identification with the gypsies in Sackville-West's letter to Woolf is an undercurrent in all three writers, a tug toward"gypsiness" that functions, I argue, as a hint of same-sex desire.