![]() ![]() ![]() It was she who coined the expression that he was ‘mad, bad and dangerous to know’, and she remarked on first seeing him: ‘That beautiful pale face will be my fate.’ She was proved right in more ways than one. Lamb – or Caro as she was familiarly known – is today best known as the most famous of Lord Byron’s many mistresses. Glenarvon, Caro’s stinging attack on Byron, became a bestseller, even as it led to her banishment from society Yet if this is to be her swansong, it is characteristically readable, accomplished and in places positively revolutionary. We must hope that Fraser continues to research and publish. Not for her a dramatic, Prospero-breaking-his-staff exit instead, she writes mildly in the prologue that ‘this book… can also be regarded as the culmination of an exciting and fulfilling life spent studying history’. At the beginning of her biography of the novelist, ‘fairy sprite’ and proto-feminist Lady Caroline Lamb, Lady Antonia Fraser hints that this may be her final book. ![]()
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