| Home - Books - Reviews - Tutorials - Software - Download - Orders - Newsletter | |
| Subscribe here for our free email newsletter - monthly update |
Custom Search
|
The Letters of Lytton Strachey
He is certainly a mass of contradictions in his private life: one minute fluttering like an elderly aunt about a minor ailment or swooning with rapture over a young messenger boy, then next minute talking about 'raping' one of his friends or discussing the techniques of coprologists with his brother James in stomach-churning detail.
He's also two-faced to an extraordinary degree - writing scathing critiques of John Maynard Keynes and Rupert Brooke in letters to third parties, then toadying up to them directly and even asking them to come on holiday with him.
His correspondence during the war years reveals him as far more politically radical than he is usually given credit for. He was not only a conscientious objector on principle, but he even wrote pamphlets critical of the way the government was handling the war.
The letters are presented and annotated in the most scholarly fashion - with full biographical notes on all the people mentioned, and all nicknames and obscure allusions spelled out. Indeed, the notes are occasionally longer than the letters they seek to explain.
Suddenly in mid volume the correspondence takes on an amazing animation and inventiveness when he meets Dora Carrington, who was to become the central figure in the rest of his life. First (and very briefly) she was his lover, and then they set up their famous menage a trois when Strachey fell in love with Ralph Partridge - and Carrington married him.
Whenever separated from Carrington, he wrote her long letters describing the various weekend house parties he attended. The portraits of Ottoline Morrell and Margot Asquith and their like are mischievous and bitchy, and although he censors himself on personal matters, he is not averse to pungent comment on others:
There are all sorts of interesting details: Strachey's sharp eye and collector's nose for modern painting (Derain and Modigliani); Maynard Keynes altering the clocks to one hour ahead of summer time; Strachey's strong opinions that Queen Victoria was 'a martyr to analeroticism' and Bernard Berenson 'has accumulated his wealth from being a New York guttersnipe'.
However, he seems at his most comfortable when in the midst of his Bloomsbury contemporaries, as a letter written from Vanessa Bell's house at Charleston suggests:
The final bunch of letters, to his last lover, Roger Senhouse, reveal his taste for sado-masochism (crucifixion, blood-letting) but also his extraordinary generosity towards friends. His late financial success led to some self-indulgence, but he seems to have spent far more on other people than on himself. Though not for long. A falsely diagnosed stomach cancer cut him down at the age of fifty-two. His soul-mate Dora Carrington committed suicide a few weeks later.
© Roy Johnson 2007 [more BLOOMSBURY GROUP books] Paul Levy, The Letters of Lytton Strachey, London: Penguin Books, 2006, pp.698, ISBN 0141014733 |
|
|
Customers who bought this book also bought
Bombay to Bloomsbury |
Customers who bought this book also bought
Lytton Strachey by Himself |
| Home - Books - Reviews - Tutorials - Software - Download - Orders - Newsletter | |
|
Mantex - PO Box 100 - Manchester M20 6GZ - UK Tel: +44 0161 432 5811 — Email: info@mantex.co.uk Copyright © Mantex 2000—2008 |