Edith Wharton was born in 1862 into the privileged New York she later described with such wit and precision in masterpieces such as The House of Mirth (1905). Wharton was also highly regarded as a landscape and interior designer, a “tastemaker” well acquainted with society. For her empathy toward World War I refugees, and her dedication to the war effort, she was named Chevalier of the Legion of Honor. In 1921 The Age of Innocence earned her the Pulitzer Prize for Literature, never before awarded to a woman. She died in 1937 in Val d’Oise on what is now called rue Edith Wharton.

The Rembrandt

A Story

by Edith Wharton

“You’re so artistic,” my cousin Eleanor Copt began.

Of all Eleanor’s exordiums it is the one I most dread. When she tells me I’m so clever I know this is merely the preamble to inviting me to meet the last literary obscurity of the moment: trial to be evaded or endured, as circumstances dictate: whereas her calling me artistic fatally connotes the request to visit, in her company, some distressed gentlewoman whose future hangs on my valuation of her old Saxe or of her grandfather’s Marc Antonios. Time was when I attempted to resist these compulsions of Eleanor’s; but I soon learned that, short of actual flight, there was no refuge from her beneficent despotism.

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