Formality, exuberance at The Mount

SALISBURY — The Mount, the Lenox, Mass., home of Gilded Age novelist Edith Wharton, is “an autobiographical house.”

Anne Schuyler, director of visitor services at The Mount, provided this insight during a presentation on Wharton at the Scoville Memorial Library on Saturday, Jan. 26.

Wharton, in designing the house and gardens, deliberately rejected Victorian excess in favor of classical simplicity and symmetry, Schuyler said.

She then showed a photograph of a room in Wharton’s mother’s home, with heavy furniture and heavier drapes.

Schuyler said the same sense of place that informs Wharton’s novels is evident at The Mount.

By the time The Mount was completed in 1902, Wharton had already staked out her architectural and design territory.

Her first book was not a work of fiction, but rather a treatise on interior design, “The Decoration of Houses,” co-written with architect Ogden Codman. It was published in 1897 and was a success. Schuyler said the book is still used in design schools.

Wharton and her husband, Teddy, bought “113 acres of open rocky pasture land” in Lenox in 1901, Schuyler said.

Wharton was trying to achieve an ideal relationship between the man-made and the natural.

“We have to make things beautiful,” Schuyler quoted Wharton as writing.

The work began in July 1901 and was finished in September 1902.

The house itself was based on an English model, with an Italian terrace that was the center for entertaining.

The interior has French and Italian elements — and lots of doors.

“She loved doors,” said Schuyler.

The heart of the house was the library, filled to bursting with books.

But Wharton did her writing in bed, in the morning.

The Mount has two gardens: the Italian garden and the flower garden.

The former is “cool and cloistered,” the latter an example of “barely controlled exuberance — like her characters,” Schuyler said.

Teddy Wharton’s mental health suffered during the couple’s time at The Mount. The marriage ended, and Wharton, who spent much of her youth in Europe, moved to France, where she remained for the rest of her life.

The Mount, after being used as a girls school and by a theater group, is now owned by Edith Wharton Restoration, which began the restoration of the house in the late 1990s and the gardens from 2000-07.

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