Lady Emily Lutyens Explained

Lady Emily Lutyens
Birth Name:The Honourable Emily Bulwer-Lytton
Birth Date:26 December 1874
Birth Place:Paris, France
Occupation:Theosophist, writer
Children:5
Parents:Robert Bulwer-Lytton, 1st Earl of Lytton
Edith Villiers

Lady Emily Lutyens (née Bulwer-Lytton; 26 December 1874 – 3 January 1964) was an English theosophist and writer.[1]

Life

Emily Lytton was born on 26 December 1874 in Paris,[2] the daughter of Robert Bulwer-Lytton, 2nd Baron of Lytton (later the 1st Earl of Lytton) and Edith Villiers. She was brought up in Lisbon, India (where her father was Viceroy from 1876 to 1880) and Knebworth House, where she was educated by governesses.[1]

From 1887 to 1891 she lived in Paris, where her father was British ambassador, and became a correspondent of the elderly Norfolk clergyman Whitwell Elwin. She returned to England after her father's death, and fell in love with Wilfrid Scawen Blunt, 35 years her senior:

She became the lifelong friend of Blunt's daughter, Judith (later Baroness Wentworth).

In 1897 she married the architect Edwin Landseer Lutyens.[3] She had five children, including Mary Lutyens, the composer Elisabeth Lutyens and the painter Robert Lutyens.[2] Lutyens interested herself in social and political questions, such as the state regulation of prostitution. She was a visitor to the local lock hospital, a member of the Moral Education League, and a supporter of women's suffrage.[4] She introduced her older sister Lady Constance Bulwer-Lytton to the suffrage movement, though was herself opposed to militancy and resigned from the Women's Social and Political Union in 1909.[1]

In 1910 she joined the Theosophical Society. She became a kind of surrogate parent to the young Jiddu Krishnamurti, brought back from India with his brother by Annie Besant in 1911.[5] Appointed by Besant as the English representative of the Order of the Star in the East, Lutyens toured the country lecturing on behalf of theosophy. She edited the theosophical journal Herald of the Star, and attracted wealthy converts to theosophy, such as Mabel Dodge.[1] In 1916, at the same time as her husband was busy designing an imperial capital at New Delhi, she held meetings for an all-India home rule movement in her drawing-room in London. She continued to protect and care for Krishnamurti, to whom she was devoted.[1] As a young adult Krishnamurti wrote to her daily from France.[5] In the 1920s she toured the world with him, convinced that he was the Messiah. In 1925 she founded the League of Motherhood, but by this time theosophy was divided over Krishna's claims. She supported Krishnamurti trying to dissolve the Theosophical Society, and in 1930 followed him in resigning from theosophy.[1]

In her eighties Lutyens published two autobiographical works: A Blessed Girl (1953) was a memoir of her upbringing, and Candles in the Sun (1957) told the story of her theosophical involvement. The Birth of Rowland (1956) was a collection of her parents' letters.

The historian, Brian Harrison, interviewed two of Lutyens' daughters, Elisabeth and Mary, in June 1975 and April 1976 respectively, as part of his Suffrage Interviews project, titled Oral evidence on the suffragette and suffragist movements: the Brian Harrison interviews.[6] Elisabeth talks about her mother's relationship with theosophy, her time in India, relationships with other family members, her disapproval of suffragette militancy, and lesbianism in the suffragette movement. Mary's interview includes Emily's influence over her brother, Victor Bulwer-Lytton, as regards Home Rule in India.

She died at her home in London on 3 January 1964, eight days after her 89th birthday.[1]

Vegetarianism

Lutyens was a strict vegetarian. Historian Jane Ridley has noted that "Never a meat-eater, Emily became a doctrinaire vegetarian, subsisting on nut cutlets disguised as lamb with a piece of macaroni wrapped in a paper frill instead of a bone".[7] Lutyens also raised her children on a vegetarian diet but her husband Edwin was a meat-eater.[7] Lutyens was a vice-president of the Vegetarian Society.[8]

Selected publications

Further reading

Notes and References

  1. 50654. Lutyens [née Bulwer-Lytton], Lady Emily. Jane. Ridley. Jane Ridley.
  2. http://www.open.ac.uk/researchprojects/makingbritain/content/emily-lutyens Emily Lutyens
  3. http://www.lutyenstrust.org.uk/about-lutyens/biography/ Edwin Lutyens by his daughter, Mary Lutyens
  4. Book: Joy Dixon. Divine Feminine: Theosophy and Feminism in England. 2003. JHU Press. 978-0-8018-7530-4. 4.
  5. Book: Shanta Rameshwar Rao. J. Krishnamurti. 2005. Sahitya Akademi. 978-81-260-1997-7. 26, 35.
  6. Web site: London School of Economics and Political Science . The Suffrage Interviews . 2024-06-03 . London School of Economics and Political Science . en-GB.
  7. Ridley, Jane. (2003). Edwin Lutyens: His Life, His Wife, His Work. Pimlico. p. 193.
  8. http://www.ivu.org/history/thesis/religion3.html "The Vegetarian Movement in England, 1847-1981: A Study in the Structure of Its Ideology"