In 1906, Philip gained a liberal seat in the
House of Commons and the Morrells moved to a townhouse in
Bloomsbury, at 44
Bedford Square. While entertaining political friends such as
Winston Churchill and
Herbert Asquith, Ottoline also became a member of the Bloomsbury Group and took a keen interest in the careers of young artists, particularly Carrington,
Stanley Spencer,
Mark Gertler, and
Gilbert Spencer. The Morrells also owned a country house at
Peppard, near
Henley on Thames. In 1915, while
World War I raged, they sold the Peppard house and bought and restored the nearby old farmhouse
Garsington Manor, where Ottoline established her talent for garden design and delighted in opening the house as a haven for like-minded people. During the war, Garsington was more significant. The Morrells and their friends were ardent
pacifists; of Garsington, she said, "it seemed good to gather round us young and enthusiastic pacifists."
Siegfried Sassoon, recuperating at Garsington after an injury, was encouraged to go
AWOL as a protest against the war. They invited
conscientious objectors such as
Duncan Grant,
Clive Bell and
Lytton Strachey to take refuge at Garsington. Phillip, who had lost his seat over his anti-war stance, represented them at their tribunals. One of Garsington's most faithful visitors was
D. H. Lawrence who, in his 1920 novel
Women in Love, mocked Morrell by modeling the character Lady Hermione after her. Morrell had a brief affair with her gardener, Lionel Gomme; The hospitality offered by the Morrells was such that their guests had no suspicion that they were in financial difficulties. Many of them assumed that Ottoline was a wealthy woman. This was far from being the case and, in 1928, the Morrells had to sell Garsington and move to more modest quarters in
Gower Street, London. Here, Lady Ottoline remained a regular host to the adherents of the Bloomsbury Group, in particular Virginia and
Leonard Woolf,
Vanessa Bell and many other artists and authors, including
Henry James,
W. B. Yeats,
L. P. Hartley, and
T. S. Eliot. in St Mary's Church,
Garsington Ottoline maintained her religious faith, but her contemporaries were fixated on the unofficial religion of 'Life Worship', where the cultivated elite focused on the development of close personal relations, cultural pursuits, vivid life experiences and the expansion of consciousness. The Garsington/Bloomsbury set believed that there was a spiritual hierarchy, with the artistic elite at one end and the "moronic masses" at the other. Among Lady Ottoline's friends, this belief was held particularly strongly by Lawrence, Virginia Woolf and Clive Bell. In spite of her strong religious beliefs, in 1907, Ottoline became a co-founder, with
Sybil Neville-Rolfe, Henry
Havelock Ellis, and
Leonard Darwin, of the
Eugenics Education Society. ==Later life and death==