'Tennyson and Holman Hunt, Carlyles, Rossettis and any number of
celebrated Trevelyans people these pages; and Mr Trevelyan's
handling of their comings and goings is masterly.' Hilary
Spurling
Pauline Trevelyan, friend and patroness of so many in the
Pre-Raphaelite circle, played an important part in the lives of
Ruskin and Swinburne in the 1850s and 1860s. Some mischievous
biographers have even claimed that Swinburne fell in love with
her.
For long she has been an intriguing, not to say mysterious,
figure to those interested in the artistic and literary life of the
period. She spotted Swinburne as a potential genius when he was
still a schoolboy; as scandal enveloped him she did not flinch from
speaking out frankly. The daughter of a poor and learned parson,
she was married to Sir Walter Calverley Trevelyan, twenty years her
senior, a strange, tall, taciturn landowner-cum-scientist, and her
opposite in character. Herself an artist, writer and critic, she
commissioned important works from Rossetti, Woolner and others.
From her immense correspondence, scarcely examined before this book
was published, we learn much more about John Ruskin.
Ruskin's marriage in particular has always attracted great
attention. It was feared, however, that the secrets surrounding its
breakdown would never be fully known. Then a candid letter from
Ruskin to a friend was suddenly unearthed. This so excited
historians that this new edition of A Pre-Raphaelite Circle was
published to include the letter in full, with all its revelations,
making this important book a crucial work of reference for those
interested in Ruskin and the Pre-Raphaelites who surrounded Lady
Trevelyan.
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