Albrizzi, Countess, 300, 302
Allegra, Byron’s natural daughter, 272, 345-346
Bankes, William, 150
Becher, Rev. John, 44, 50
Benzoni, Countess, 300, 302-303
Bessborough, Lady, 148
Blessington, Lady, 336-337, 342, 352-353
“Bride of Abydos, The,” 170
Broglie, Duc de, 265
Byron, Admiral Lord, 6
Byron, Augusta. See Leigh, Augusta
Byron, Captain George, the poet’s cousin, 209, 226
Byron, Captain, “Mad Jack,” the poet’s father, 6-7, 10-11
Byron, George Noel Gordon, Lord, ancestors, parents, and hereditary influences, 1-9;
childhood and schooldays, 10-22;
schoolboy love affairs, 23-34;
life at Cambridge, and flirtations at Southwell, 35-49;
revelry at Newstead, 50-62;
the “grand tour,” 63-74;
flirtations in Spain, 70-74;
meeting with Mrs. Spencer Smith, 74-86;
at Athens, 87;
swims the Hellespont, 94;
return to England, 101;
death of his mother, 101;
publishes “Childe Harold,” 103-111;
recollections of Mary Chaworth, 114-126;
infatuation of Lady Caroline Lamb, 128-145;
acquaintance with Lady Oxford, 148-155;
renewed relations with Mary Chaworth, 164-181;
Marriage with Miss Milbanke, 182-193;
disagreements, 194-207;
Lady Byron demands separation, 208-226;
scandalous accusations against him, 226-252;
departure for the Continent, 253;
acquaintance with Miss Clairmont, 256-263, 271-273;
at Geneva, 264-276;
in Italy, 277 et seq.;
moral decline, 280-298;
in the Venetian salons, 300;
attachment to Countess Guiccioli, 302-328;
revolutionary activities, 324-335;
life at Pisa and Genoa, 336-355;
enlists in the Greek cause, 356-373;
illness and death, 369-373
Byron, John, Lord, 2
Byron, Lady, wife of the poet, marriage, 192;
disagreements, 194-207;
demands separation, 208-226;
scandalous admissions, 226-252;
mentioned, 339-341, 373. See also Milbanke, Anna Isabella
Byron, Mrs., the poet’s mother, 10-17, 28, 31, 37-38, 42, 51, 101
Byron, Richard, Lord, 2
Byron, Sir John, of Claydon, 1
Byron, “the wicked Lord,” 4-6, 12, 15
Byron, William, Lord, 3
Canning, Sir Stratford, 96-98
Carlisle, Lord, 15-17, 58, 60-61
Carmarthen, Marchioness of, 6
Chateaubriand, Vicomte de, 64-66
Chaworth, Mary, 25, 27-34, 114-126, 156-157, 159-160, 164-181, 248-250, 310-311, 366-368, 375-376
Chaworth, William, 4
“Childe Harold,” 65-66, 102-111, 120
Clairmont, Jane, 256-263, 269-273, 284, 334, 346
Clermont, Mrs., 209, 219
Cogni, Margarita, 289-291
Cordova, Admiral, 69
Dallas, 103-105, 110
Davies, Scrope, 39, 118, 228, 255
“Don Juan,” 297, 342
Duff, Mary, 23
“English Bards and Scotch Reviewers,” 59-62
Forbes, Lady Adelaide, 166, 184
Galt, John, 71-74, 83, 98, 105-106
Gamba, Pietro, 362
Gifford, William, 152
Godwin, Mary, 257, 260, 263, 269-271, 273
Guiccioli, Count, 302, 306, 313-321
Guiccioli, Countess, 233, 302-323, 330-332, 336-337, 341-343, 350-355
Hanson, Charles, 150-152, 216, 219
Harness, Rev. William, 119, 127, 135
Hervey, Mrs., 265
Hobhouse, John Cam, 66, 68, 72, 87, 99, 153, 189-190, 208-209, 213, 218, 219, 221, 228, 255, 274, 277-278
Hodgson, 118-119, 123-124, 127, 144, 152, 216, 218, 228, 246
Holland, Lady, 132
Holland, Lord, 221
Hoppner, Consul-General at Venice, 288, 304, 307, 316-317
Horton, Wilmot, 224
“Hours of Idleness,” 21
Houson, Anne, 45
Hunt, Leigh, 228, 336-337, 349-352
Hutchinson, Colonel, 3
Jersey, Lady, 227-228
Kemble, Fanny, 141
Lamb, Lady Caroline, 106-107, 128-145, 146-147, 245
Lamb, William, afterwards Lord Melbourne, 128-131, 133-135, 142-143, 145-147
Lauriston, General, 76
Leigh, Medora, 177
Leigh, Augusta, 7, 37, 151-152, 155, 174-175, 197-199, 209, 212-213, 216, 219, 222-223, 234-252, 274, 291, 373
Lovelace, Lord, 206, 218, 235-240, 249-252
Lushington, Dr., 214, 217, 245-246
Macri, Theresa, 88-91
“Manfred,” 297
Mardyn, Mrs., 256
Mavrocordatos, 359, 361, 363
Medwin, 96, 138, 140-141, 144, 160-161, 195, 336
Melbourne, Lady, 128, 185-186, 221
Melbourne, Lord. See Lamb, William
Milbanke, Anna Isabella, afterwards Lady Byron, 128, 155, 182-192
Milbanke, Sir Ralph, afterwards Noel, 191
Moore, Thomas, 123-124, 127, 131-132, 152, 154-155, 168, 184, 228, 315, 334
Morgan, Lady, 132
Murray, John, 151-152, 319, 346
Napoleon I., 75-77
Noel, Sir Ralph, 211, 214-216, 219. See also Milbanke, Sir Ralph
Oxford, Lady, 148-157
Parker, Margaret, 25-26
Pedley, Mrs., 93-94
Robertson, Rev. F. W., 237, 251
Rogers, Samuel, 127, 131-132, 135-136, 228, 254
Salvo, Marquis de, 76-82
Segati, Marianna, 280-284, 287, 288-290
Shelley, Percy Bysshe, 257, 260-261, 263-264, 269-271, 273, 293, 331-332, 336-337, 339, 348-349
Shipman, Thomas, 3
Sligo, Lord, 99
Smith, Florence Spencer, 74-86
StaËl, Madame de, 162, 166, 264-265
Stanhope, Lady Hester, 95-96
Stendhal, 277-278
Stowe, Harriet Beecher, 233-239, 246
“Thyrza,” 121
Trelawny, 336-338, 359
Webster, James Wedderburn, 289, 293
Webster, Lady Frances, 158
Werry, Mrs., 91
Westmorland, Lady, 265
Williams, Captain, 348
Williams, Hugh W., 88-89
Printed by
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Footnotes:
[1] One of the heads of the family was born before his father’s marriage, but he was subsequently given a title on his own merits.
[2] In Mr. Murray’s latest edition of “The Letters and Journals.”
[3] He would have preferred Oxford, but there was no set of rooms vacant at Christ Church.
[4] They intoned underneath his windows the supplication: Good Lort, deliver us!
[5] Musters took his wife’s name when he married her, though he afterwards resumed his own.
[6] In “Byron: the Last Phase.”
[7] Afterwards the Rev. William Harness, and a popular preacher.
[8] Sir Ralph Milbanke had taken the name of Noel on succeeding to some property.
[9] For the full text of the letter see Appendix.
[10] It is doubtful whether Shelley was at Marlow at this date, so that Miss Clairmont’s memory of the place of meeting was probably at fault.
[11] Southey, among others, circulated the scandal.
[12] Odysseus, who was in Attica.
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