WIVES OF THE PRIME MINISTERS
in boy's clothes. He would not believe that a schoolboy would write such a thing. In a few days I received him dressed as usual. I told him the author, William Osmond, was dead." She always declared that her husband was delighted with the book. It was not shown to him till it was printed.
However that may have been, the deed of separation was ready for signing. As Lady Caroline put it: "If I will but sign a paper, all my rich relations will protect me, and I shall, no doubt, go with an Almack ticket to heaven." All the parties whose signatures were required were assembled, and Lamb went first to the room where she was, in order to speak to her about their son. The others waited and waited; at length, growing impatient, her brother went to see the cause of the delay. He found her seated beside her husband feeding him with tiny scraps of transparent bread and butter.
And so for a time things remained as they were.
Byron had married in 1815, and the next year was separated from his wife, and left England for ever. To her credit it must be said that Lady Caroline never forgot Byron. With all her caprice, the episode made a lasting impression
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