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Updated: May 16, 2025


At such a time, how should "Bell" Milbanke resist the intoxication, even before the poet addressed himself particularly to her? A great reader in the quietness of her home, where all her tastes were indulged, a lover of poetry, and so genial and sympathizing as to be always sure to be filled with the spirit of her time, how could she fail to idolize Byron as others did?

Then the day after New Year's Day 1814, he married Miss Milbanke, a great heiress, a future baroness in her own right, and handsome after a fashion, but of a cold, prim, and reserved disposition, as well as of a very unforgiving temper. It probably did not surprise any one who knew the pair when, a year later, they separated for ever.

Now that the tinsel has worn off, and we can judge the man and his work dispassionately, we see how easily even the critics of the age were governed by romantic impulses. The adulation of Byron lasted only a few years in England. In 1815 he married Miss Milbanke, an English heiress, who abruptly left him a year later.

A narrator, in whom the editor had 'implicit confidence, mentions how, when a lady held the twig just over a hidden well, 'the twig turned so quick as to snap, breaking near her fingers. There seems to be no indiscretion in saying, as the statement has often been printed before, that the lady spoken of in the 'Quarterly Review' was Lady Milbanke, mother of the wife of Byron. Dr.

In handing the bride into the carriage he said, "Miss Milbanke, are you ready?" a mistake said to be of evil omen. Byron never really loved his wife; and though he has been absurdly accused of marrying for revenge, we must suspect that he married in part for a settlement.

In his particular line he was a great force with a brain that took spasmodic twists. It is absurd to expect that a being whose genius produced "Childe Harold" and "Manfred" could be fashioned into living a quite commonplace domestic life. Miss Milbanke, who married him, and the public who first blessed and then cursed and made him an outcast, were not faultless.

I was much in his society at this time, and was filled with foreboding anxieties, which the unfortunate events that followed only too fully justified. At the end of December he set out for Seaham, the seat of Sir Ralph Milbanke, the lady's father, and on January 2, 1815, was married. On March 8, he wrote to me from Seaham: "Bell is in health, and unvaried good-humour and behaviour."

It is chiefly of interest for its associations with the poet Hayley, who lived at Eartham House, now the residence of Sir P. Milbanke. The house became for a time the rendezvous of many celebrities, including Cowper, Flaxman, Blake and Romney.

I hope, however, that friend will have more respect for my memory than to imitate the taste of Mr Moore. Lord Byron in 1813 The Lady's Tragedy Miss Milbanke Growing Uneasiness of Lord Byron's Mind The Friar's Ghost The Marriage A Member of the Drury Lane Committee Embarrassed Affairs The Separation

He chose a woman with income, one who was strong, cool-headed, safe and sensible. Miss Milbanke was the antithesis of his mother. The lady declined but that is nothing. They were married within a year. In another year the wife left her husband and went back to her mother, carrying in her arms a girl baby, only a few weeks old. She never returned to her husband.

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