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  1. 25 de jun. de 2018 · Caroline Lamb has been remembered by history, thanks to her tenure as mistress to poet, Lord Byron. Rather than the several books she published, it's her love life that remains her legacy. With countless books and academic papers on Byron citing Caroline Lamb as the ultimate crazy ex; unhinged, obsessed, stalker-ish and prone to sending bloody…

  2. Lady Caroline Lamb (geborene Ponsonby, * 13. November 1785 auf Canford House in Dorset; † 26. Januar 1828 in London) war eine britische Schriftstellerin. Thomas Lawrence: Porträt von Lady Caroline Lamb, Öl auf Leinwand, um 1805. Leben. Caroline Ponsonby war die einzige Tochter ...

  3. Lady Caroline Lamb es una película dirigida por Robert Bolt con Sarah Miles, Jon Finch, Richard Chamberlain, John Mills .... Año: 1972. Título original: Lady Caroline Lamb. Sinopsis: Siglo XIX. Caroline Lamb es una escritora de la alta sociedad que está casada con Will, un joven político al que no ama. Fruto de este matrimonio fueron tres hijos que no sobrevivieron.

  4. Lady Caroline Lamb (1972) Lady Caroline Lamb (1972) View more photos Movie Info Synopsis Lord Melbourne's (Jon Finch) wife (Sarah Miles) has a scandalous affair with Lord Byron (Richard ...

  5. Lady Caroline Lamb, född Ponsonby den 13 november 1785, död den 26 januari 1828, var en engelsk författare, dotter till earlen av Bessborough. Hon gifte sig 1805 med William Lamb, sedermera Lord Melbourne. Lambs egentliga ryktbarhet härrör från hennes förhållande till Lord Byron.

  6. The vivid and dramatic life of Lady Caroline Lamb, whose scandalous love affair with Lord Byron overshadowed her own creativity and desire to break free from society's constraints. From the outset, Caroline Lamb had a rebellious nature. From childhood she grew increasingly troublesome, experimenting with sedatives like laudanum, and she had a ...

  7. 29 de feb. de 2024 · Lady Caroline Lamb is a name that hovers on the fringes of Romanticism because of her adulterous but short-lived affair with Lord Byron in 1812, a representation of which drives forward the narrative of her first novel Glenarvon (1816). Published a month after Byron had left England in self-imposed exile, the novel was a scandalous success due to its being a roman-à-clef.