Ginevra King Explained

Birth Date:30 November 1898
Birth Place:Chicago, Illinois, U.S.
Death Place:Charleston, South Carolina, U.S.
Burial Place:Lake Forest Cemetery
Alma Mater:Westover School (expelled)
Occupation:Socialite
Children:3
Relatives:

Ginevra King Pirie (November 30, 1898 – December 13, 1980) was an American socialite and heiress. As one of the self-proclaimed "Big Four" debutantes of Chicago during World , King inspired many characters in the novels and short stories of Jazz Age writer F. Scott Fitzgerald; in particular, the character of Daisy Buchanan in The Great Gatsby. A 16-year-old King met an 18-year-old Fitzgerald at a sledding party in Saint Paul, Minnesota, and they shared a passionate romance from 1915 to 1917.

Although King was "madly in love" with Fitzgerald, their relationship ended when King's family intervened. Her father Charles Garfield King purportedly warned the young writer that "poor boys shouldn't think of marrying rich girls", and he forbade further courtship of his daughter by Fitzgerald. A heartbroken Fitzgerald dropped out of Princeton University and enlisted in the United States Army amid World . While courting his future wife Zelda Sayre and other young women while garrisoned near Montgomery, Alabama, Fitzgerald continued to write to King in the hope of rekindling their relationship.

While Fitzgerald served in the army, King's father arranged her marriage to, the son of his wealthy business associate John J. Mitchell. An avid polo player, Bill Mitchell became the director of Texaco, and he partly served as the model for Thomas "Tom" Buchanan in The Great Gatsby. Despite King marrying Mitchell and Fitzgerald marrying Zelda Sayre, Fitzgerald remained forever in love with King until his death. Fitzgerald scholar Maureen Corrigan notes that King, far more so than the author's wife Zelda Sayre, became "the love who lodged like an irritant in Fitzgerald's imagination, producing the literary pearl that is Daisy Buchanan". In the mind of Fitzgerald, King became the prototype of the unobtainable, upper-class woman who embodies the elusive American Dream.

During her relationship with Fitzgerald, Ginevra wrote a Gatsby-like story which she sent to the young author. In her story, she is trapped in a loveless marriage with a wealthy man yet still pines for Fitzgerald. The lovers are reunited only after Fitzgerald attains enough money to take her away from her adulterous husband. Fitzgerald kept Ginevra's story with him, and scholars have noted the plot similarities between Ginevra's story and Fitzgerald's novel.

King separated from Mitchell in 1937 after an unhappy marriage. A year later, Fitzgerald attempted to reunite with King when she visited Hollywood in 1938. The reunion proved a disaster due to Fitzgerald's alcoholism, and a disappointed King returned to Chicago. She married John T. Pirie Jr., a business tycoon and owner of the Chicago department retailer Carson Pirie Scott & Company. She died in 1980 at the age of 82 at her estate in Charleston, South Carolina.

Early life and education

Born in Chicago, on November 30, 1898, King was the eldest daughter of socialite Ginevra Fuller (1877–1964) and Chicago stockbroker Charles Garfield King (1874–1945).[1] She had two younger sisters, Marjorie and Barbara.[1] Like her mother and her grandmother, her name derived from Ginevra de' Benci, a 15th-century Florentine aristocratic woman whom Leonardo da Vinci painted in an eponymous work.

Raised in luxury at her family's sprawling estate in the racially segregated and class segregated White Anglo-Saxon Protestant township of Lake Forest,[2] Ginevra enjoyed a carefree life of riding polo ponies and playing tennis as well as engaging in private-school intrigues and country-club flirtations. Both sides of Ginevra's family were extravagantly wealthy and exclusively socialized with the other "old money" families in Chicago such as the Mitchells, Armours, Cudahys, Swifts, McCormicks, Palmers, and Chatfield-Taylors. The privileged children of these prominent Chicago families played together, attended the same private schools, and endogamously married within this small social circle.[3] [4]

Due to her family's immense wealth, the Chicago press chronicled Ginevra's mundane social activities, and newspaper columnists fêted the young Ginevra as one of the city's most desirable debutantes. As the center of attention in this environment, King developed "a clear sense of her family's wealth and position and, from an early age, a highly developed understanding of how social status worked". She socialized within an elite circle of other wealthy Chicago debutantes—self-proclaimed as the "Big Four"—which included her friends Edith Cummings, Courtney Letts, and Margaret Carry:As a privileged teenager cocooned in a small circle of wealthy Protestant families, King developed a notorious self-centeredness,[5] and she purportedly lacked introspection. Intensely competitive, King disliked losing to anyone at anything—tennis, golf or basketball. This competitiveness did not extend to her academic studies. Although she completed her schoolwork, she disliked learning and instead preferred parties where she could sit up late gossiping with her Big Four friends. Her closest friend in the Big Four quartet, Edith Cummings, became one of the premier amateur golfers during the Jazz Age and served as the model for the character of Jordan Baker in Fitzgerald's 1925 novel The Great Gatsby.

In 1914, King's father sent Ginevra to Middlebury, Connecticut, to attend the Westover School, an exclusive finishing school for the daughters of America's wealthiest families. Her Westover schoolmates included such notable persons as Isabel Stillman Rockefeller of the Rockefeller dynasty, as well as Margaret Livingston Bush and Mary Eleanor Bush, the aunts of President George H. W. Bush. The school prided itself on inculcating a sense of noblesse oblige in its pupils. Many of Westover's attendees became the wives of wealthy men who sought fulfillment as society hostesses and, if they wished, in helping those less privileged.

Romance with Fitzgerald

While visiting her Westover roommate Marie Hersey in St. Paul, Minnesota, a 16-year-old Ginevra King met an 18-year-old F. Scott Fitzgerald at a sledding party on Summit Avenue on January 4, 1915. At the time, Fitzgerald was a sophomore at Princeton University. The two teenagers fell in love.[6] [7] Fitzgerald described this petting encounter in a short story: "It was the sleigh ride he remembered most and kissing her cool cheeks in the straw in one corner while she laughed up at the cold white stars. The couple next to them had their backs turned and he kissed her little neck and her ears and never her lips."

After this flirtatious encounter under the stars in Minnesota, Ginevra returned to Westover in Connecticut, and Fitzgerald returned to nearby Princeton in New Jersey. He deluged Ginevra with correspondence which pleased her as she measured her popularity "by which boys wrote to her and how many letters she received". Against his wishes, Ginevra read Fitzgerald's intimate letters aloud to her Westover classmates and rival suitors for their amusement. At one point, Ginevra asked for a photograph of him as she coyly professed to recall only that he had "yellow hair and big blue eyes". Despite such coyness, Ginevra regarded Scott as among the more important of her many romantic conquests due to his handsome good looks and Princeton standing.

The lovers corresponded for months and exchanged photographs. Over time, their letters became passionate. Ginevra began having erotic dreams about Scott and "slept with his letters" in the hope "that dreams about him would come in the night". Fitzgerald visited Westover several times, and Ginevra professed in her diary to be "madly in love with him".[6] In March 1915, Fitzgerald asked Ginevra to be his date for Princeton's sophomore prom, but Ginevra's mother forbade Ginevra to attend as the consort of a middle-class young man. "I'm so [disappointed] about the dance I can't see straight," Ginevra wrote Scott. Despite this setback, they met again in June in New York. They dined at the Ritz and saw two Broadway plays, Nobody Home and Midnight Frolic. Fitzgerald wrote that Ginevra "made luminous the Ritz roof on a brief passage through [New York]."[8]

As the months passed, King and Fitzgerald rendezvoused in different locations, and they discussed—perhaps lightheartedly—eloping. In February–March 1916, Fitzgerald wrote a short story titled "The Perfect Hour" in which he imagined Ginevra and himself blissfully together at last, and he mailed the love story to her by post as a token of his affection. Ginevra read the story aloud to a rival suitor who generously praised Fitzgerald's writing as excellent.

In response to Fitzgerald's "The Perfect Hour" tale, Ginevra herself wrote a Gatsby-like short story which she sent to Fitzgerald on March 6. In her story, she is trapped in a loveless marriage with a wealthy man yet still pines for Fitzgerald, a former lover from her past. The two lovers are reunited only after Fitzgerald attains enough money to take her away from her adulterous husband. Fitzgerald kept Ginevra's story with him until his death, and scholars have noted the plot similarities between Ginevra's story and Fitzgerald's work The Great Gatsby.[9]

Despite Fitzgerald's frequent visits and love letters, Ginevra continued entertaining other suitors. "At this time," Ginevra later explained, "I was definitely out for quantity not quality in beaux, and, although Scott was top man, I still wasn't serious enough not to want plenty of other attention!" At the time, she wrote apologetically to Scott, "I know I am a flirt and I can't stop it".

On May 22, 1916, Westover School expelled Ginevra for flirting with a crowd of young male admirers from her dormitory window. Mary Robbins Hillard, the stern headmistress of Westover school, declared King to be a "bold, bad hussy" and an "adventuress", a derogatory term referring to a woman who ensnares wealthy men in order to increase her social position.[10] After legal threats by Ginevra's imperious and influential father, a cowed Hillard readmitted King to the school, but her father—irate at Westover's treatment of his beloved daughter—decided that she instead would complete her education at a New York finishing school. Ginevra recounted these events in her diary:

A shocked Fitzgerald regarded Ginevra's expulsion from Westover as a catastrophe that doomed both their relationship and his dreams. He later remarked to his daughter Scottie on the fated quality of the incident: "It was in the cards that Ginevra King should get fired from Westover". Due to Ginevra's abrupt expulsion, Fitzgerald could no longer visit her frequently from nearby Princeton, and he could no longer court her in the relatively egalitarian collegiate atmosphere which obscured his lack of wealth. Instead, he would be forced to continue his romantic pursuit of Ginevra at her family's villa in Lake Forest under the judgmental eyes of her class-conscious parents and in hopeless competition with the scions of affluent Chicago families.

Following her expulsion from Westover, Fitzgerald visited Ginevra in August 1916 at her family's Lake Forest villa. The visit proved to be a disaster. Although Ginevra and Fitzgerald enjoyed a "petting party",[11] Fitzgerald's ledger notes the presence of a romantic competitor, "beautiful" William "Bill" Mitchell,[11] the son of Charles Garfield King's wealthy business associate John J. Mitchell. Now in competition with Bill Mitchell, Fitzgerald's reception at the villa by Ginevra's parents proved less hospitable. At the time, the predominantly White Anglo-Saxon Protestant township of Lake Forest socially excluded others such as Black and Jewish people, and the presence of a middle-class Irish Catholic parvenu such as Fitzgerald likely caused a stir.[12]

There is much speculation regarding what transpired during Fitzgerald's final visit in August 1916. Stockbroker Charles Garfield King likely became irritated by Fitzgerald's pursuit of his daughter. He allegedly interrogated the 19-year-old Fitzgerald regarding his financial prospects. Disappointed by Fitzgerald's answers, he purportedly forbade further courtship of his daughter and instructed Ginevra to drive Fitzgerald to the nearest train station. Either Ginevra's father or someone else remarked, loud enough to be heard by the young Fitzgerald, that "poor boys shouldn't think of marrying rich girls".[13] [14] [15] This line appears in the 1974 and 2013 film adaptations of The Great Gatsby.

Due to his middle-class status and her family's intervention, the relationship between King and Fitzgerald stagnated. Two months later, in November 1916, their final encounter as a romantic couple occurred when Ginevra visited the Princeton campus for a Princeton–Yale football game. King and Fitzgerald rendezvoused amid the Roman colonnades of Penn Station. King later admitted that she had begun secretly dating a Yale student in New York by this time, and this complicated her rendezvous with Fitzgerald who was unaware of the other young man awaiting her attentions:

In January 1917, the final break between King and Fitzgerald occurred.[16] By this time, likely echoing her father's opinion of Fitzgerald, Ginevra discounted the young writer as a suitable match because of his middle-class status. According to scholar James L. W. West, Ginevra scrutinized Fitzgerald "against the backdrop of Lake Forest by that time, as opposed to seeing him at her school," and she realized he "didn't fit in" with the elite social milieu of the wealthy upper class. A heartbroken Fitzgerald claimed that King rejected his love with "supreme boredom and indifference",[17] and he viewed Ginevra as a rich socialite who merely toyed with his sincere affections before casting him aside. In his mind, Ginevra became—much like Daisy Buchanan—one of the "careless" people of privilege who "smashed up things … then retreated back into their money." In the wake of Ginevra's rejection, a distraught Fitzgerald dropped out of Princeton and enlisted in the United States Army amid World .

Arranged marriage to Mitchell

While stationed as an army officer near Montgomery, Alabama, Fitzgerald continued writing Ginevra and begged to resume their relationship. During this interlude, Ginevra's father arranged her marriage to a business associate's son as a merger between two elite families.[18]

On July 15, 1918, King wrote to Fitzgerald and informed him of her engagement to polo player William "Bill" Mitchell, the son of banker John J. Mitchell, president of the Illinois Trust & Savings Bank and a friend of Charles Garfield King with whom he shared offices in downtown Chicago.[19] "To say I am the happiest girl on earth would be expressing it mildly", King wrote in a letter to Fitzgerald, "I wish you knew Bill so that you could know how very lucky I am".

According to scholar James L. W. West, "Ginevra's marriage to Bill Mitchell was a dynastic affair very much approved by both sets of parents. In fact Bill's younger brother, Clarence, would marry Ginevra's younger sister Marjorie a few years later." By consenting to marry the son of her father's business associate, Ginevra "made the same choice Daisy Buchanan did, accepting the safe haven of money rather than waiting for a truer love to come along."

Ginevra King married Bill Mitchell at St. Chrysostom's Episcopal Church in Chicago, Illinois, on September 4, 1918. Newspapers lauded the event as one of the most attended weddings of the season. As the arranged marriage occurred amid World, a Chicago Tribune columnist described the wedding ceremony as a "war wedding" and heralded the occasion as "the triumph of youth." Columnists gushed over "the extreme youth of the bridal couple, their gay and gallant air, their uncommon good looks, the distinguished appearance of both sets of parents, the smart frocks and becoming uniforms, all made an impression of something brilliant, charming, and cheerful." The wedding ceremony featured "great garlands of fruit, that Luca della Robbia himself might have designed, [which] outlined the [chapel] arches. The altar, with its wonderful blue reredos was adorned with flowers in blue vases set on a piece of filet lace, rich and rare enough for a royal marriage." After the ceremony, Mitchell's parents hosted a lavish wedding reception at the Blackstone Hotel. Although Ginevra invited Fitzgerald to the wedding, he could not attend as he was stationed as an army officer in Montgomery, Alabama. He placed the wedding invitation, newspaper clippings reporting the ceremony, and a piece of Ginevra's handkerchief in his scrapbook with the note: "" Three days after Ginevra's wedding, on September 7, 1918, a lonely Fitzgerald professed his affections to Zelda Sayre, a Southern belle whom he had met in Montgomery and who reminded him of Ginevra.[20] A year and a half later, on April 3, 1920, Fitzgerald married Sayre in a simple ceremony at St. Patrick's Cathedral, New York. At the time of their wedding, Fitzgerald later claimed neither he nor Zelda loved each other,[21] [22] and the early years of their marriage in New York City proved to be a disappointment.[23] [24]

Despite King marrying Bill Mitchell and Fitzgerald marrying Zelda Sayre, Fitzgerald remained forever in love with King until his death, and the author "could not think of her without tears coming to his eyes".[25] Following his failed pursuit of Ginevra due to his insufficient wealth, Fitzgerald's attitude towards the upper class became embittered,[26] [27] and he wrote in 1926: "Let me tell you about the very rich. They are different from you and me. They possess and enjoy early, and it does something to them, makes them soft where we are hard, and cynical where we are trustful, in a way that, unless you were born rich, it is very difficult to understand. They think, deep in their hearts, that they are better than we are." For the remainder of his life, Fitzgerald harbored a smoldering resentment towards the wealthy.[27]

King and Mitchell had three children, William, Charles, and Ginevra.[28] Her second son Charles suffered from Down syndrome and required constant care. Ultimately, the arranged marriage between King and Mitchell proved tumultuous and unhappy, and the couple had difficulty residing in the same house together.[29] Despite marital discord,[29] Bill Mitchell rose to become the director of the Continental Illinois National Bank and Texaco, and he partly inspired the character of Tom Buchanan in The Great Gatsby. His brother, banker Jack Mitchell, co-founded United Airlines and married the only daughter of magnate J. Ogden Armour, the second-richest man in the United States after John D. Rockefeller. By 1926, the extended Mitchell family had amassed in excess of $120 million (equivalent to $2.1 billion in 2023).

Reunion and later years

By the Summer of 1937, the arranged marriage between King and Mitchell had dissolved, and the couple was estranged. During this year, King began an extramarital affair with paramour John T. Pirie, Jr., whom she met during an exclusive North Shore fox hunt. Pirie was the heir presumptive to the Chicago department retailer Carson Pirie Scott & Company.

During the posh fox hunt, Pirie's horse balked at jumping a fence and hurtled him to the ground in an unconscious heap. Trailing behind Pirie on her horse, Ginevra saw him lying motionless on the grass and leaped to the ground. She hovered over Pirie until an ambulance arrived, clambered into the ambulance after him, and stayed with the retail magnate for the remainder of her life.

One year later, in October 1938, Ginevra rendezvoused with a physically ailing Fitzgerald for the last time at the Beverly Wilshire Hotel in Hollywood. "She was the first girl I ever loved, and I have faithfully avoided seeing her up to this moment to keep the illusion perfect", an ill Fitzgerald informed his daughter Scottie, shortly before the meeting. The reunion between King and Fitzgerald proved a disaster due to the author's alcoholism.

Although "on the wagon" for months, the sight of Ginevra ostensibly broke Fitzgerald's resolve. After reminiscing over lunch, Fitzgerald lingered with Ginevra at the hotel bar. Shortly before Ginevra's departure, which Fitzgerald thought would be their final meeting, the forlorn author began downing double shots of gin. When Ginevra asked if she had inspired any characters in Fitzgerald's novel The Beautiful and Damned, an inebriated Fitzgerald quipped: "Which bitch do you think you are?"[30] [31] On this note, they parted forever. Fitzgerald used this final meeting as the basis for his 1941 short story (posthumously published), "Three Hours Between Planes". Two years later, the 44-year-old author died of occlusive coronary arteriosclerosis on December 21, 1940.

In 1939, following the death of her 16-year-old disabled son Charles from pneumonia, Ginevra—who already had been living with businessman John T. Pirie—formally divorced Bill Mitchell. After their divorce, Bill Mitchell married heiress Sara Anne Wood, the daughter of General Robert E. Wood who spent three decades as chairman of Sears, Roebuck & Company. In April 1942, King married John T. Pirie, Jr. in a quiet ceremony. Three years later, in September 1945, Ginevra's father Charles Garfield King died at Passavant Hospital in Chicago at the age of 77. By the time of Charles Garfield King's death, the deceased Fitzgerald had experienced a posthumous revival, and the author whom the stockbroker once scorned had become one of the most famous names in America.

In January 1951, Fitzgerald's daughter Scottie sent Ginevra a copy of her letters which the author had kept with him until his death. Reviewing her teenage letters to Fitzgerald, Ginevra commented: "I managed to gag through them, although I was staggering with boredom at myself by the time I was through. Goodness, what a self-centered little ass I was!" "I was too thoughtless in those days," she recalled, "and too much in love with love to think of consequences." King later founded the Ladies Guild of the American Cancer Society. She died in 1980 at the age of 82 at her family's estate in Charleston, South Carolina. She was buried at Lake Forest Cemetery in Illinois.

Legacy and influence

Ginevra King exerted a tremendous influence on Fitzgerald's writing, far more so than his wife Zelda Sayre. Decades after their passionate romance, Fitzgerald described Ginevra as "my first girl 18–20 whom I've used over and over [in my writing] and never forgotten". Scholar Maureen Corrigan notes that "because she's the one who got away, Ginevra—even more than Zelda—is the love who lodged like an irritant in Fitzgerald's imagination, producing the literary pearl that is Daisy Buchanan".

In the mind of the author, King became the prototype of the unobtainable, upper-class woman who embodies the elusive American Dream. In contrast to earlier American authors who viewed the American Dream with considerable optimism, Fitzgerald's literary works such as The Great Gatsby depict the American Dream as an illusion since the pursuit of the dream—much like Fitzgerald's pursuit of Ginevra—only results in dissatisfaction for those who chase it, owing to its unattainability.

In addition to Daisy Buchanan in The Great Gatsby (1925), Fitzgerald's literary oeuvre abounds with characters modeled after and inspired by King, including:

King is featured in the books The Perfect Hour: The Romance of F. Scott Fitzgerald and Ginevra King by James L. W. West III and in a fictionalized form in Gatsby's Girl by Caroline Preston. The musical The Pursuit of Persephone tells the story of King's romance with Fitzgerald. She appears in West of Sunset by Stewart O'Nan, a fictionalized account of Fitzgerald's final years.

See also

References

Works cited

External links

Notes and References

  1. [1910 United States Census]
  2. "Lacking the outward signs of high status that the landed nobility of Europe once enjoyed, wealthy American families have long maintained social distance from the 'common people' by withdrawing into upper-class enclaves. Often located on forested hills far from the stench and noise of the industrial districts, places like Greenwich, Connecticut; Lake Forest, Illinois; and Palm Beach, Florida, are 'clear material statement[s] of status, power, and privilege.'"

  3. "...an exception to the rule of marrying within their circle."

  4. "Ginevra's marriage to Bill Mitchell was a dynastic affair very much approved by both sets of parents. In fact Bill's younger brother, Clarence, would marry Ginevra's younger sister Marjorie a few years later."

  5. Later as an adult, King described her youthful self in a letter to F. Scott Fitzgerald's daughter: "Goodness, what a self-centered little ass I was!"

  6. Contrary to claims by Ginevra's family, Ginevra wrote in her diary that she was "madly in love with" Fitzgerald: "Oh it was so wonderful to see him again," she wrote on February 20, 1916, "I am madly in love with him. He is so wonderful".

  7. "He met and fell in love with Ginevra King, a rich and wildly popular visitor from Chicago, who at sixteen had the social ease of a young duchess. A beauty with dark curling hair and large brown romantic eyes, she had an air of daring and innocent allure. To Fitzgerald, Ginevra King was the embodiment of a dream, and he was immediately and completely captivated."

  8. "June [1915]... Ritz, Nobody Home and Midnight Frolic with Ginevra."

  9. "The correspondences between Ginevra's story and Fitzgerald's novel are close enough to suggest that her story might have had an influence, and perhaps an important one, on the genesis of the novel."

  10. December 2, 2022.
  11. "Aug [1916]... Petting Party. Ginevra. Party. The bad day... Beautiful Billy Mitchell... Poor boys shouldn't think of marrying rich girls."

  12. "Boundaries have always been paramount in Lake Forest. The town was off-limits to Black and Jewish people for decades, and even during the First World War a middle-class Catholic like Fitzgerald showing up could have caused a stir."

  13. "The oftrepeated story goes that during an unhappy visit Scott paid to Ginevra's Lake Forest vacation villa in the summer of 1916, her father pontificated, in a loud voice meant to be overheard: 'Poor boys shouldn't think of marrying rich girls.'"

  14. "That August Fitzgerald visited Ginevra in Lake Forest, Ill. Afterward he wrote in his ledger foreboding words, spoken to him perhaps by Ginevra's father, 'Poor boys shouldn't think of marrying rich girls.'"

  15. "Fitzgerald's sense that Ginevra might be toying with him crystallized during that visit, when he was devastated and never quite recovered from overhearing the words, 'Poor boys shouldn’t think of marrying rich girls'."

  16. "Jan [1917]... Final break with Ginevra."

  17. "The heartbroken Fitzgerald, meanwhile, had her correspondence typed and bound."

  18. "On July 15, 1918, [Ginevra] writes to tell [Fitzgerald] that on the following day she will announce her engagement to William Mitchell, in what her granddaughter believes was something of an arranged marriage between two prominent Chicago families."

  19. "A year later Ginevra wrote that she was engaged to Bill Mitchell, another wealthy young Chicagoan who was the son of a business associate of her father's. She said she wanted Fitzgerald to be the first to know."

  20. "Zelda was attractive and vivacious and reminded him in many ways of Ginevra King".

  21. Fitzgerald wrote in 1939, "You [Zelda] submitted at the moment of our marriage when your passion for me was at as low ebb as mine for you. ... I never wanted the Zelda I married. I didn't love you again till after you became pregnant."

  22. "Victory was sweet, though not as sweet as it would have been six months earlier before Zelda had rejected him. Fitzgerald couldn't recapture the thrill of their first love".

  23. In July 1938, Fitzgerald wrote to his daughter that, "I decided to marry your mother after all, even though I knew she was spoiled and meant no good to me. I was sorry immediately I had married her but, being patient in those days, made the best of it".

  24. Describing his marriage to Zelda, Fitzgerald said that—aside from "long conversations" late at night—their relations lacked "a closeness" which they never "achieved in the workaday world of marriage."

  25. "Ginevra gave substance to an ideal Fitzgerald would cling to for a lifetime; to the end of his days, the thought of her could bring tears to his eyes."

  26. Ginevra "came to embody 'not only his condemnation of the rich but his ambivalence, his fascination with wealth and his sense of inferiority around it,' said James L.W. West III, who teaches Fitzgerald at Pennsylvania State University and wrote The Perfect Hour, a 2005 history of Fitzgerald and King's romance."

  27. Fitzgerald harbored "the smouldering hatred of a peasant" towards the wealthy and their elite social milieu.

  28. [1930 United States Census]
  29. King's granddaughter remarked, "I don't think they ever figured out was what it was going to be like to live in the same house together."

  30. "He drank and, according to the account King gave her granddaughter, looked a sad sight. King asked Fitzgerald if she was one of the characters in The Beautiful and the Damned. 'Which bitch do you think you are?' he replied.

  31. "The couple went to a bar. Fitzgerald began drinking. Ginevra King's granddaughter, Ginevra King Chandler, said that her grandmother asked which of his characters were modeled after her. 'Which bitch do you think you are?' Fitzgerald replied, Ms. Chandler said."

  32. "Scott's second visit to Lake Forest in August 1916 was partial inspiration for the quirky short story 'The Diamond as Big as the Ritz'."

  33. "During evenings throughout the Lake Forest summers of a century ago, band music floated from the great houses with dancing couples spilling out from spacious rooms to broad terraces. And, as Fitzgerald wrote of his heroine in 'Babes in the Woods', 'The vista of her life seemed an un-ended succession of scenes like this, under the moonlight and pale starlight, and in the backs of warm limousines and low cosy [sic] roadsters stopped under sheltering trees — only the boy might change.'"