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  1. 15 de ago. de 2005 · Michael Rossington, a leading Shelley scholar, has discovered a previously unrecorded manuscript of 1820 - the 'Ode to Naples' - in the beautiful handwriting of Clairmont (1798-1879), who captivated the poet with her wit, her intelligence and her black eyes. The manuscript, which was found in the library of UCL, bears Shelley's amendments.

  2. Students of Shelley's highly complex and puzzling personality have always found it necessary to be concerned with the “sisters of his soul.” No great amount of attention has, however, thus far been paid to Claire (Clara Mary Jane) Clairmont, daughter of the second Mrs. Godwin by a previous marriage, companion of Shelley and Mary on the elopement, and thereafter for long intervals a member ...

  3. The story revolves around Claire Clairmont, stepsister of Mary Shelley, and concentrates on three intervals of her life - 1816, where she visits Lord Byron at Lake Geneva with Percy and Mary Shelley during the stormy summer that followed a volcanic eruption, a later period working as a governess in Russia in 1825 and later again in Paris in 1843 where she has settled.

    • Lesley McDowell
  4. 4 de feb. de 2021 · Godwin ahora estaba solo con dos niñas: Fanny y Mary, por ello, pocos años después contraería matrimonio con la viuda Clairmont, quien «aportó» dos hijos —Charles y Claire— de su primer ...

  5. 29 de feb. de 2024 · McDowell brings Claire to vivid, embodied life; a flirtatious, flawed woman fighting for her place in a man's world. A spellbinding retelling. Claire Clairmont hasn't often been given her due and McDowell restores her to thrilling, palpitating life. Clairmont emerges as a brave and sympathetic heroine in this engrossing novel.

  6. 12 de nov. de 2012 · It was during this time that Claire, changed her name from Jane Clairmont to Claire, which she considered more romantic, she had tried Clara first. Lord Byron When Shelley and Mary returned to England, Claire continued to live with her stepsister and her stepsister’s lover, supported by Shelley and revelling in the infamous indecency of their relationship.

  7. Claire Clairmont was the stepsister of Mary Shelley, author of Frankenstein, and she played a larger role in the society of Romantic writers than she’s often given credit for; but that’s not what she’s pissed off about. If she had lived in the twenty-first century, Claire would have been that girl in high school — you know the one ...