I've never read anything by Vita Sackville-West, although I should, if only because I keep one of her more famous quotes on the wall of my classroom. “It is necessary to write,” wrote Vita, “if the days are not to slip emptily by. How else, indeed, to clap the net over the butterfly of the moment.”
Vita's
days were scarcely empty. She won the Hawthornden Prize twice, wrote novels,
poems, translations and biographies, and was happily married for some forty
years while indulging in affairs with the likes of Virginia Woolf and Hilda
Matheson. She witnessed many fascinating moments in her time and wrote about
many of them, both in her fiction and in her long correspondence with literary
luminaries of her day. Vita let few butterflies fly by unexamined.

