
E-text prepared by Delphine Lettau
BY - VERNON LEE, - AUTHOR OF "HAUNTINGS," ETC.
LONDON WILLIAM HEINEMANN - 1892 - [All rights reserved]
A modest trio of tales explores the delicate dance between frivolity and deeper purpose, using the lives of three women as mirrors for larger questions of duty, vanity and the cost of wasted talent. The narrator weaves gentle irony with melancholy, inviting listeners to contemplate how society judges idleness and how small gestures can echo larger moral truths. Set against the backdrops of Italian villas, bustling canals and polished drawing‑rooms, each story feels like a quiet conversation that lingers long after the final sentence.
The opening story, set in a moonlit Venetian salon, follows the contemplative Jervase Marion as he drifts between the perfume of exotic flowers and the soft strains of a gondolier’s song. The ambience of candlelight, distant laughter and the gentle sway of the canal creates a dream‑like tableau that draws attention to the fragile boundary between appearance and inner reality. As the evening unfolds, the listener is gently pulled into the characters’ unspoken longings, hinting at the subtle tensions that will shape the rest of the collection.
Language
en
Duration
~5 hours (324K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2010-11-08
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
Subjects

1856–1935
Best known for eerie supernatural tales and sharp writing on art, this French-born British author lived much of her life in Italy and brought a cosmopolitan eye to everything she wrote. Her work moves easily between ghost stories, travel, criticism, and big questions about beauty and feeling.
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by Vernon Lee

by Vernon Lee

by Vernon Lee

by Vernon Lee