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  1. The Journals of Claire Clairmont. Claire Clairmont. Harvard University Press, 1968 - Biography & Autobiography - 571 pages. The diaries of Clara Mary Jane Clairmont are, so far as is known, the last of the major documents of the Shelley-Byron circle to be published. Only the writings of the Shelleys themselves surpass hers in importance for ...

  2. Other articles where Claire Clairmont is discussed: Lord Byron: Life and career: …eloped and were living with Claire Clairmont, Godwin’s half sister. (Byron had begun an affair with Clairmont in England.) In Geneva he wrote the third canto of Childe Harold (1816), which follows Harold from Belgium up the Rhine River to Switzerland. It memorably evokes the historical associations of each ...

  3. 5 de may. de 2014 · Bibliography: p. 483-499. Claire Clairmont's reading list and list of performances attended: p. 501-520

  4. 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 ...

  5. Clara Mary Jane Clairmont, eller Claire Clairmont som hon var allmänt känd som, född 27 april 1798 i Brislington i Bristol, död 19 mars 1879 i Florens i Italien, var styvsyster till författaren Mary Shelley och mor till Lord Byrons dotter Allegra .

  6. 28 de mar. de 2014 · Claire Clairmont was the archetypal Romantic woman, far more than her more famous step-sister, Mary Shelley. She was born, probably illegitimately, to a Mary Jane Deveraux, who happened to move to London close to the residence of one William Godwin, who was at that moment mourning the sudden death of his new wife, Mary Wollstonecraft, in childbirth.

  7. 4 de sept. de 2021 · The first Claire Clairmont manuscript materials acquired by the Collection – including her 1818 journal – came from the 1820 sale of the library of the bibliographer and forger Harry Buxton Forman. Over the next seventy years, occasional Clairmont acquisitions were made, most often through auction.