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Consequently, the portrait that takes shape in “Lady Caroline Lamb: A Free Spirit” is not only convincing but also oddly affecting. Above all, it is lifelike—so much so, indeed, that when ...
In Lady Caroline Lamb’s notorious first novel Glenarvon (1816), a young, married Anglo-Irish noblewoman becomes overwhelmed by emotional and existential crises, while the United Irish movement ...
LADY CAROLINE LAMB , niece to Georgiana ... she forged his signature in order to obtain a miniature portrait of him from his publisher; she dressed up as a page; she sent him a basket of ...
“Mad, bad and dangerous to know”: Lady Caroline Lamb’s dismissal of Lord Byron is often quoted for what it says about the louche poet, perceived to be in the wrong, and less about the woman who stalks ...
His wife during the years before he inherited his title was the beautiful Caroline Lamb, whose scandalous behaviour excited rather more interest than his dull political career which began in 1806.
Historical drama recounting the story of the scandalous affair between the wife of up-and-coming English politician William Lamb and unconventional Romantic poet Lord Byron. Show more Caroline ...
“I awoke one morning and found myself famous,” he later recalled. Lady Caroline Lamb was among the hundreds of female admirers who sent 24-year-old Byron an anonymous letter of praise for this ...