Publisher description for The whole disgraceful truth : selected letters of Lady Caroline Lamb / [compiled by] Paul Douglass.


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Lady Caroline Lamb was described by her lover, Lord Byron, as having a heart like a “little volcano” and as “the cleverest most agreeable, absurd, amiable, perplexing, dangerous fascinating little being that lives now or ought to have lived 2000 years ago.” She wrote witty and revealing letters to fellow writers like Lady Morgan, William Godwin, Robert Malthus, and Amelia Opie, and to her publishers John Murray and Henry Colburn, to her cousins Hart, Georgiana, and Harrio, as well as to her mother, husband, son, and lovers. In those letters, she told her correspondents “the whole disgraceful truth” of her drug and alcohol addictions, her affairs with Sir Godfrey Vassal Webster, Lord Byron, and Michael Bruce, and her jealousy of her cousin Georgiana (whom William Lamb had “adored” before proposing to Caroline). She also revealed her efforts to make a happy life for her mentally retarded, epileptic son, Augustus, and her determination to become a respected writer of fiction and poetry.




Library of Congress subject headings for this publication:
Lamb, Caroline, -- Lady, -- 1785-1828 -- Correspondence.
Novelists, English -- 19th century -- Correspondence.
Politicians' spouses -- Great Britain -- Correspondence.
Byron, George Gordon Byron, -- baron, -- 1788-1824 -- Relations with women.
Great Britain -- Social life and customs -- 19th century.