| About 334,000 results  | books.google.ie Richard Andrew Cardwell, International Byron Society - 1997 - 227 pages | Essays in this volume concentrate on the creative works of Lord Byron and two areas of concern in Byron studies: Byron's reception and enduring impact in Europe, and Byron within the context of new forms of reading literature in the post ... |
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 | books.google.ie | Lord Byron's Life in Italy is an English translation of Vie de Lord Byron en Italie by Byron's Italian friend Teresa Guiccioli, the manuscript of which has lain in Ravenna since the early 1880s, and which has never-been published, or even ... |
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 | books.google.ie With Notices of His Life George Gordon Byron Baron Byron Thomas Moore ...
way of their meetings, — not so much by the husband himself, who appears to
have liked and courted Lord Byron's society, as by the watchfulness of other
relatives, ... |
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 | books.google.ie |
 | books.google.ie George Gordon Byron Baron Byron, Thomas Moore ... difficulties thrown in the
way of their meetings, — not so much by the husband himself, who appears to
have liked and courted Lord Byron's society, u by the watchfulness of other
relatives, ... |
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 | books.google.ie "Durante la mla malattia L. B. era liked and courted Lord Byron's society, as by
the watchfulness of other relatives, and the apprehension felt by themselves lest
their intimacy should give uneasiness to the father of the lady, Count Gamba, ... |
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 | books.google.ie Inevitably, the title 'Lord' was deliberately omitted and the poet was presented as
simply 'George Gordon Byron' or 'George ... A writer and member of the Byron
Society of Georgia since its foundation, he is the author of a fictional recreation of
... |
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 | books.google.ie Those of Lord Byron to Madame Guiccioli, which are for the most part in Italian,
and written with a degree of ease and ... of their meetings, — not so much by the
husband himself, who appears to have liked and courted Lord Byron's society, ... |
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 | books.google.ie rectness attained rarely by foreigners, refer chiefly to the difficulties thrown in the
way of their meetings, — not so much by the husband himself, who appears to
have liked and courted Lord Byron's society, as by the watchfulness of other ... |
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