Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. In 1816 Lady Caroline Lamb’s first novel, Glenarvon, was published amid a storm of controversy, due to the content, a fictional account of Lamb’s relationship with Lord Byron, and the timing. The novel appeared a month after Byron had left England in self-imposed exile. The sensation created by this novel has, to a certain extent, obscured ...

  2. I[N early January of 1813 Lady Caroline Lamb forged a letter to herself from Byron in order to obtain his favorite portrait of himself-the Newstead miniature--from John Murray, his publisher.

  3. Caroline Lamb. Caroline Lamb ( 13 de novembro de 1785 — 26 de janeiro de 1828) foi uma romancista e uma aristocrata britânica, filha de Frederick Ponsonby, 3° Conde de Bessborough e Lady Henrietta Spencer (filha de John Spencer, 1.º Conde Spencer ). Ela é mais conhecida por seu tempestuoso caso com Lord Byron em 1812, quando era casada ...

  4. tr.wikipedia.org › wiki › Caroline_LambCaroline Lamb - Vikipedi

    Lady Caroline Lamb, (diğer adı : Melbourne Vikontesi Caroline ; d. 13 Kasım 1785 ; ö. 26 Ocak 1828), İngiliz kadın soylu ve yazardır. İngiliz soylu ve siyasetçi Melbourne vikontu William Lamb ile evliydi.

  5. 31 de ago. de 2021 · Lady Caroline Lamb is a name that hovers on the fringes of Romanticism because of her adulterous but short-lived affair with Lord Byron in 1812, a representation of which drives forward the narrative of her first novel Glenarvon ( 1816 ). Published a month after Byron had left England in self-imposed exile, the novel was a scandalous success ...

  6. 1 de abr. de 1989 · The statement that Byron was ''mad, bad and dangerous to know'' comes from Lady Caroline Lamb after their first meeting, when the publication of ''Childe Harold'' (1812) made him the literary and ...

  7. 27 de may. de 2012 · Lady Caroline Lamb, Highbury, and the Waltz: Regency Dancing. When Lady Caroline Lamb met Byron in 1812, the waltz was starting to gain traction with the more progressive elements of Society. This couples dance was considered rather racy in an age when stately group English country dances were the primary offerings at Almack’s.