

Though beloved among her large coterie of friends and relations, there are whispers that she is an eccentric: she has been known to wander alone in the park as well indulge in long, lazy philosophical conversations with her vagabond cousin. Eline Vere is a young heiress: dreamy, impulsive, and subject to bleak moods. At the most, one could interpret the undetailed face hidden under the brim of her hat as dreamy.Louis Couperus was catapulted to prominence in 1889 with Eline Vere, a psychological masterpiece inspired by Flaubert and Tolstoy. This sculptor depicted her primarily as a stately woman from The Hague.

However, the tragedy of Eline Vere in Couperus' novel is not immediately reflected in the statue that Van der Nahmer made of her. In the end, as in many late 19th-century books, fate has it that she suffers from an overdose of morphine, which she uses to treat her insomnia.

She has difficulty adjusting to the banality of daily life and flees into her own dream world. His 'Eline Vere' appeared in 1889 and is about a young woman from the better circles of The Hague who suffers from life. Van der Nahmer was inspired by the main character in the eponymous debut novel by Louis Couperus (1863-1923). There are many sculptures by his hand in The Hague. This elegant, bronze female figure was made by the well-known sculptor Theo van der Nahmer. On the occasion of the book ball that Pulchri Studio held in 1974 around the theme of Couperus, she spent some time on Lange Voorhout. Incidentally, Eline Vere has not always stood on the Groot Hertoginnelaan. Behind her rise the imposing houses of the Embassy quarter.

She stands in a small park along the Groot Hertoginnelaan. The place where this elegant woman has been placed is also in keeping with her appearance. Dressed in the latest fashion, wearing a hat and holding a parasol to complete the picture. Eline Vere: there she stands, stately as was befitting a lady of the Hague at the end of the 19th century.
