The Real Lady ByronIn 1992, the bicentenary of the birth of Annabella Noel Byron, this book makes a sympathetic reassessment of this misunderstood and much-maligned woman, refuting the unfavourable contemporary judgements made about her and revealing instead the many benevolent causes she supported. |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 70
Page 50
... felt there should exist a record of events , especially those concerning Byron , as she had perceived them so that they could be understood from her point of view and could be used in a proposed memoir of her life . They were undated ...
... felt there should exist a record of events , especially those concerning Byron , as she had perceived them so that they could be understood from her point of view and could be used in a proposed memoir of her life . They were undated ...
Page 100
... felt appalled at the desert which seemed spread before me . At first indeed I felt relief from breathing an atmosphere of innocence - but it was not for long . There was a burning world within which made the external one cold - I had ...
... felt appalled at the desert which seemed spread before me . At first indeed I felt relief from breathing an atmosphere of innocence - but it was not for long . There was a burning world within which made the external one cold - I had ...
Page 264
... felt guilty about the debt of £ 500 and only told her mother that ' books and music are THE two things which have ... felt a little hurt that her father , with whom she felt a strong affinity , had not remembered her in his will , even ...
... felt guilty about the debt of £ 500 and only told her mother that ' books and music are THE two things which have ... felt a little hurt that her father , with whom she felt a strong affinity , had not remembered her in his will , even ...
Common terms and phrases
Ada's Allegra André Maurois Anna Jameson Annabella wrote appeared asked Augusta became believe Byron wrote called Caroline cause child considered correspondence daughter dear dearest death died distress England expressed father fear feel felt friendship George give Halnaby Hanson happy Harrow Harrow school heard heart Hobhouse hope husband interest Joanna Baillie Judith kind Kirkby Mallory knew Lady Blessington Lady Byron Lady Melbourne Lady Noel Langley Moore later Leigh lived London Lord Byron Lord Melbourne Lovelace Lushington marriage married Mary Medora Milbanke mind Miss Moore mother Murray never Newstead Newstead Abbey opinion pain perhaps person poem poetry Ralph reply returned Robert Noel Seaham seemed separation sister Six Mile Bottom St James's Palace stay Stowe suffering tell thought Trevanion trust truth verses Villiers wife wish woman words write written wrote to Annabella