Vernon Lee, born Vernon Lee Huxley, was an English writer renowned for her supernatural and Gothic novels. Born on October 14, 1856, and died on February 13, 1935, Lee's works often explored the mysterious and supernatural, with a unique writing style that has captivated readers.
Related Quotes
Source: Renaissance fancies & studies
Source: Hortus Vitae: Essays on the Gardening of Life
“Some persons' letters seem almost framed to afford a series of alibis for their personality.”
Source: Hortus Vitae: And Limbo
Source: Hortus vitae : essays on the garden of life
Source: Hortus vitae : essays on the garden of life
Source: Hortus Vitae: Essays on the Gardening of Life
“Mankind may be divided into playgoers and not playgoers.”
Source: Hortus Vitae: And Limbo
“A deal of the world's sound happiness is lost through Shyness.”
Source: A Vernon Lee Anthology: Selections from the Earlier Works
“There is no end to the deceits of the past.”
Source: Limbo, and Other Essays: To which is Now Added, Ariadne in Mantua
“The greatest pleasure of reading consists in re-reading.”
Source: Hortus Vitae: And Limbo
“There is too little courtship in the world.”
Source: Hortus Vitae: And Limbo
Source: Hortus Vitae: And Limbo
“What being at leisure means is more easily felt than defined.”
Source: Hortus Vitae: And Limbo
