In 1942, aged 24, Angelica married David Garnett, by then an editor, reviewer and novelist whose parents were
Edward Garnett and
Constance Garnett, the noted translator of Russian literature. The relationship had begun in the spring of 1938, when Garnett was married to his first wife, Rachel "Ray" Marshall, who was dying of cancer. Angelica had four daughters with Garnett—
Amaryllis,
Henrietta, Nerissa, and Frances. Garnett was a member of her parents' circle and a former lover of Duncan Grant, her father. When Angelica was born, Garnett had written to
Lytton Strachey saying of the baby:
"Its beauty is the remarkable thing … I think of marrying it; when she is 20 I shall be 46 – will it be scandalous?" Angelica lost her virginity to Garnett in
H. G. Wells's spare bedroom. The couple moved to
Hilton Hall, Cambridgeshire, which David Garnett had bought in 1924. His novella,
Aspects of Love (1955), dedicated to Angelica and involving similarly complicated domestic arrangements, was later adapted into a highly successful musical by
Andrew Lloyd Webber. The Garnetts separated in 1967. For a time Angelica was in love with George Bergen, a Russian-Jewish painter who had been another of Duncan Grant's lovers, but the relationship did not last. ==Memoir==