|

Published 1999
in
the
English Literary
Studies series of the University of Victoria Press.
Although I had known of
William Clifford through my husband’s long involvement
with the applications of Clifford Algebras it was not
until in 1997, when reading Leon Edel’s Life of
Henry James, that I became interested in William’s
wife Lucy and began my research. When Henry James died
in 1916 Lucy Clifford along with two of Henry’s young
friends, Jocelyn Persse and Hugh Walpole, received
legacies of £100. They were the only people outside his
family to be remembered in this way..
In 1998 I
was fortunate enough to trace typescripts of some
seventy of Henry James’s letters to Lucy in the Houghton
Collection at Harvard. Only eleven of them had been
previously published. Professor Marysa Demoor and I
edited, annotated and published the full collection with
the University of Victoria Press in 1999 as part of their
English Literary Studies Series. The book is
titled ' "Bravest of women and finest of friends":
Henry James's Letters to Lucy Clifford'
Biographical details about Lucy are thin on the ground.
She was secretive - even devious - about events in her
early life. However, letters are often as revealing of
the personality of the recipient as of the writer and
this was certainly the case with Henry James’s letters
to Lucy - as we read his letters we learn about her and
it becomes clear that Lucy held a very special place
indeed in Henry James’s affections.
In her
review of the book for Victorian Periodicals Review,
Mary Elizabeth Leighton of The University of Alberta
wrote ‘One can only regret that Henry James burned
his papers before his death. If Lucy Clifford was half
as lively as his remarks to her and the introduction to
the book suggest, her letters would have been a rare
pleasure indeed.’
Leighton
notes that, above all, James appreciated Clifford’s ‘generous
sympathy’ for his work, and he in turn offered her
criticism, both generous and severe, of her own writing.
The intimacy of their friendship is manifest in his
moving letters about the death of his brother William
and about the declaration of war in 1914.
The letters also demonstrate the trust that he
had in Lucy’ discretion since he would sometimes express
quite scandalous criticisms of mutual acquaintances and
beg her to burn these letters immediately
after reading them.
Importantly
the letters
reveal how much James treasured the closeness of their
friendship
Sadly, few of Lucy’s letters to him remain: they
probably went up in smoke in his regular burnings of
personal correspondence in the fireplace and garden at
Lamb House.
In most of his
letters he addressed her as ‘Dearest Lucy C’ or ‘Dearest
Lucy’ but used ‘Good and Only Aunt’; ‘Dearest
Creature’; and ‘Beloved Girl’ too. Almost
every letter is closed differently - ‘your all
faithful and fond’; ‘yours re-boundingly’; ‘evvy
your Nevvy’; ‘your ever so affectionate’; ‘your
doting old Nevvy’; ‘constantly yours’; ‘your
most adhesive and devoted’; ‘your ever clinging’;
‘your constant old Nevvy’; ‘tender and true’;
‘all increasingly’; ‘seedy and stumbling but
not quite crumbling’ Henry James. Just one
letter ended up with a frivolous ‘ever your Lambkin’!
Henry James was only three years older than Lucy but the
teasing ‘Aunt’
and ‘Nevvy’ epithets came about in 1892 when Lucy
published
Aunt Anne, which was considered to be one of her best
novels.
The
Henry James letters to Lucy span the years 1892-1914 and are rich in detail
about the literary and theatrical scene of the period.
|