
Renée Vivien, born Pauline Mary Tarn, was a British poet who wrote in the French language. She took to heart all the mannerisms of Symbolism, as one of the last poets to claim allegiance to the school. Her compositions include sonnets, hendecasyllabic verse, and prose poetry. Renée's poetry and novels show several sources of inspiration: Natalie Barney, Violet Shilleto, Pierre Louys, and Sappho. Natalie inspired retellings of their relationship through prose and poem. Violet Shilleto, Renée's childhood friend and love who died in 1901, appears in Renée's work through repeated images of violets and the color purple. Pierre Louys' sensual "Songs of Bilitis" and Sappho's evocative poems about women-love influenced Renée's poetic style. Sappho, in particular, became an icon for Renée—she translated the work of Sappho into modern French, and even traveled with Natalie to Lesbos in an attempt to revive a women's artist colony on the island.
Books

The Woman of the Wolf and Other Stories
1904

A Crown of Violets
2015

Chloe Plus Olivia
An Anthology of Lesbian Literature from the Seventeenth Century to the Present
1994

Etudes et Preludes
1901

The Muse of the Violets
Poems
1982

A Woman Appeared to Me
1904

Oeuvres de Renée Vivien
2012

Lilith's Legacy
Prose Poems and Short Stories
2018