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  1. 17 de dez. de 2016 · En aquel tiempo, Violet exigió a Vita que acabara con toda relación carnal con Harold. El pacto entre ambas se mantuvo. Violet se casaría con Denys Trefusis bajo la condición de no consumar su matrimonio. Las dos planearon dejar Inglaterra tras la boda para abandonar un “destino seguro”. El riesgo de ser excluidas

  2. www.violettrefusis.com › copyright-domande-risposteViolet Trefusis

    Violet Trefusis su Internet, cosa fare? Wikipedia, blog non autorizzati, pagine su Violet Trefusis (o a lei collegate) su Facebook, profili fake a suo nome, sono da considerarsi fonti inattendibili-soprattutto quelle in lingua inglese- perché riportano attraverso un meccanismo di “copia e incolla” errori e gravi inesattezze contenute, a loro volta, in alcune pubblicazioni (pseudo ...

  3. 1 de jun. de 2004 · Kirstie Blair; Gypsies and Lesbian Desire: Vita Sackville-West, Violet Trefusis, and Virginia Woolf. Twentieth-Century Literature 1 June 2004; 50 (2): ...

  4. www.violettrefusis.com › fr › libriViolet Trefusis

    W.Heinemann. London, 1933. “Violette Tréfusis is an essential authoress: the sincerity of inspiration cannot be classified in terms of literary fashion, so it has the added value of originality and freshness. And, above all, it is a timeless style of writing.”.

  5. 11 de fev. de 2010 · Michael Holroyd. Violet Trefusis was born on 6 June 1894, the elder daughter of Alice Keppel, a famously discreet mistress of the future Edward VII. ‘I wonder if I shall ever squeeze as much romance into my life as she has had in hers,’ Violet wrote in the summer of 1918 to Vita Sackville-West. She had begun to squeeze a very indiscreet ...

  6. Violet met Vita Sackville-West at a party when she was 10. [2] They became close friends and spent time together in Italy. In 1913 Vita married Harold Nicolson, but Vita and Violet soon became lovers, causing a scandal. Under pressure from her mother, Violet married Denys Trefusis, but the marriage was not a success.

  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.