The Lady In Red: An Eighteenth-Century Tale Of Sex, Scandal, And Divorce (37 page)

Read The Lady In Red: An Eighteenth-Century Tale Of Sex, Scandal, And Divorce Online

Authors: Hallie Rubenhold

Tags: #*Retail Copy*, #History, #Non-Fiction, #European History, #Biography

BOOK: The Lady In Red: An Eighteenth-Century Tale Of Sex, Scandal, And Divorce
5.77Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
Muhlstein, A.,
Memoirs of the comtesse de Boigne
(2003)
Murray, Venetia,
High Society in the Regency Period, 1788–1830
(1998)
Namier, Sir Lewis and Brooke, John,
The History of Parliament: The House of Commons, 1754–1790
, 3 vols (1985)
Nevill, Ralph,
London Clubs
(1911)
Norton, Rictor,
Mother Clap’s Molly House: The Gay Subculture in England, 1700–1830
(1992)
Page, William (ed.)
Victoria County History: A History of the County of Hampshire
, vol. 5 (1912)
Parker, Derek,
The Trampled Wife: The Scandalous Life of Mary Eleanor Bowes
(Stroud, 2006)
Peakman, Julie,
Lascivious Bodies
(2004)
Pevsner, Nikolaus and Bradley, Simon,
The Buildings of England, London 6: Westminster
(2003)
Pevsner, Nikolaus and Cherry, Bridget,
The Buildings of England, London 3: North West
(2002)
Pevsner, Nikolaus and Lloyd, David W.,
The Buildings of England, The Isle of Wight
(2006)
Picard, Liza,
Dr Johnson’s London
(2000)
Porter, R.,
English Society in the Eighteenth Century
(1984)
Postle, Martin (ed.)
Joshua Reynolds: The Creation of Celebrity
(2005)
Read, John Meredith,
Historic Studies in Vaud, Berne and Savoy
(1897)
Reverend, Vicomte A.,
Titres, anoblissements et pairies de la restauration
, 6 vols (Paris, 1903)
Ribeiro, Aileen,
A Visual History of Costume: The Eighteenth Century
(1983)
Rice, H.C. Jr,
Thomas Jefferson’s Paris
(Princeton, 1976)
Roscoe, E.S. and Clergue, Helen (eds)
George Selwyn, his Letters and his Life
(1899)
Royal Academy of Arts,
Citizens and Kings: Portraits in the Age of Revolution, 1760–1830
(2007)
Royal Commission on Historical Manuscripts,
The First Report of the Royal Commission on Historical Manuscripts
(1870)
Rubenhold, Hallie,
The Covent Garden Ladies
(Stroud, 2005)
Russell, Gillian, ‘The Theatres of War: Performance, Politics and Society, 1793–1815’, in
Eighteenth Century Women Dramatists
, ed. Melinda C. Fineburg (Oxford, 1995), pp. 33–51
Russell, Gillian,
Women, Sociability and Theatre in Georgian London
(2007)
Russell Barker, G.F. and Stenning, A.H.,
Record of Old Westminsters
(1928)
Sagan, Eli,
Citzens & Cannibals
(Lanham, Maryland, 2001)
See, R.M.M.,
Masquerier and his Circle
(1922)
Shawe-Taylor, Desmond,
The Georgians: Eighteenth-Century Portraiture and Society
(1990)
Sheppard, F.H.W. (ed.)
Survey of London: The Museums Area of South Kensington and Westminster
, vol. 38 (1978)
Sheridan, Richard Brinsley,
The School for Scandal
, ed. Paul Ranger (1986)
Sheridan, Richard B.,
Sugar and Slavery: an Economic History of the British West Indies 1623–1795
(Baltimore, Maryland, 1973)
Shoemaker, Robert,
The London Mob
(2004)
Smith, John Thomas,
A Book for a Rainy Day; or Recollections of the Events of Sixty Years, 1766–1833
(1861)
Smith, W.G. (ed.)
The Amorous Illustrations of Thomas Rowlandson
(1983)
Staves, Susan,
Married Women’s Separate Property in England, 1660–1833
(London, 1990)
Steinmetz, Andrew,
The Gaming Table, its Votaries and Victims
(1870)
Stokes, F.G. (ed.)
A Journal of My Journey to Paris in the Year 1765
(1931)
Stokes, Hugh,
The Devonshire House Circle
(1917)
Stone, Lawrence,
Broken Lives: Separation and Divorce in England, 1660–1857
, (Oxford, 1993)
Stone, Lawrence,
The Family, Sex and Marriage in England, 1500–1800
(1979)
Stone, Lawrence,
Road to Divorce: England 1530–1987
(Oxford, 1992)
Summers, Judith,
The Empress of Pleasure
(2003)
Sutherland, D.M.G.,
France 1789–1815
:
Revolution and Counterrevolution
(Oxford, 1986)
Swinburne, Henry,
The Courts of Europe at the Close of the Last Century
(1841)
Thompson, J.M.,
The French Revolution
(Oxford, 1985)
Tillyard, Stella,
Aristocrats
(1994)
Tillyard, Stella,
A Royal Affair
(2006)
Timbs, John,
English Eccentrics and Eccentricities
(1969)
Toledano, Ehud R.,
Slavery and Abolition in the Ottoman Middle East
(Seattle, 1998)
Vectis, Philo,
The Isle of Wight Tourist and Companion at Cowes
(Cowes, 1830)
Walford, Edward,
Old and New London
, 4 vols (1878)
Wallace, Nesbit Willoughby,
A Regimental Chronicle and List of Officers of the 60th or the King’s Royal Rifle Corps
(Oxford, 1879)
Wark, Robert E. (ed.)
Rowlandson’s Drawings for a Tour in a Post Chaise
(San Marino, California, 1963)
Werkmeister, Lucyle Thomas,
The London Daily Press, 1772–1792
(1965)
Western, J.R.,
The English Militia in the Eighteenth Century
(1965)
Whithead, John L.,
The Undercliff of the Isle of Wight
(1911)
Williams, Eric Eustace,
Capitalism and Slavery
(Chapel Hill, 1994)
Williams, Kate,
England’s Mistress: The Infamous Life of Emma Hamilton
(2006)
Wilson, Richard and Mackley, Alan,
Creating Paradise: the Building of the English Country House, 1660–1880
(2000)
Winter, C.W.R.,
The Manor Houses of the Isle of Wight
(1984)
Wortley Montagu, Mary,
Life on the Golden Horn
(2007)
JOURNAL ARTICLES
Anon., ‘A Georgian Ladies Club’,
Times Literary Supplement
, 11 August 1932, pp. 561–2
Anon., ‘The Brocklesby Paintings’,
The Connoisseur
(June 1957), p. 64
Alger, J., ‘The British Colony in Paris, 1792–93’,
English Historical Review
, 1898
Andrew, Donna T., ‘Adultery à-la-Mode: Privilege, the Law and Attitudes to Adultery, 1770–1809’,
History
, vol. 82, no. 265 (1997), pp. 5–23
Barnhart, Russell T., ‘Gambling in Revolutionary Paris–The Palais Royal: 1789–1838’,
Journal of Gambling Studies
, vol. 8, no. 2 (June 1992)
Barrell, John, ‘The Dangerous Goddess: Masculinity, Prestige and the Aesthetic in Early Eighteenth Century Britain’,
Cultural Critique
, no. 12 (Spring 1989)
Bermingham, Ann, ‘The Aesthetics of Ignorance: The Accomplished Woman in the Culture of Connoisseurship’,
Oxford Art Journal
, vol. 16, no. 2 (1993), pp. 3–20
Fulton, Gordon D., ‘Why Look at Clarissa?’,
Eighteenth-Century Life
, vol. 20, no. 2 (May 1996), pp. 21–32
Gilbert, A.N., ‘Law and Honour among Eighteenth Century Army Officers’,
History
, J. xix (1976)
Habakkuk, H.J., ‘Marriage Settlements in the Eighteenth Century’,
Transactions of the Royal Historical Society
, fourth series, 32 (1950)
Herbert, Charles, ‘Coxheath Camp, 1778–1779’,
Journal of the Society for Army Historical Research
, no. 44 (Fall 1967), pp. 129–48
Rendell, Jane, ‘Almacks Assembly Rooms: A Site of Sexual Pleasure’,
Journal of Architectural Education
, vol. 55, no. 3 (February 2002), pp. 136–7
Rizzo, Betty, ‘Equivocations of Gender and Rank: Eighteenth Century Sporting Women’,
Eighteenth Century Life
, vol. 26, no. 1 (Winter 2002), pp 70–93
Russell, Gillian, ‘The Peeresses and the Prostitutes: The Founding of the London Pantheon’,
Nineteenth Century Contexts
, vol. 27, no. 1 (March 2005), pp. 11–25
Sherbo, Arthur, ‘A Suggestion for the Original of Thackeray’s Rawdon Crawley’,
Nineteenth Century Fiction
, vol. 10, no. 3 (December 1955), pp. 211–16
Straub, Kristina, ‘Reconstructing the Gaze: Voyeurism in Richardson’s
Pamela
’,
Studies in Eighteenth Century Culture
, no. 18 (1988), pp. 419–31
UNPUBLISHED SOURCES
Bray, Peter,
Appuldurcombe House
(Ventor and District Local History Society, undated)
Clark, Gregory, ‘The Secret History of the Industrial Revolution’ (unpublished paper given at the University of California, Davis, October 2001)
Jessel, Christopher,
A Firm of First Rate Connexion; Farrer & Co
. (unpublished booklet for the firm of Farrer & Co.)
The index that appeared in the print version of this title does not match the pages of your eBook. Please use the search function on your eReading device to search for terms of interest. For your reference, the terms that appear in the print index are listed below.
 
 
Abbott, Captain Charles
Abergavenny, Lady Catherine
Abergavenny, Lord
Abergavenny
v.
Lyddel
Adam, Robert
Adams, Lady Margaret
Aiguillon, Duchesse d’
Ainslie, Sir Robert
Akenside, Mark
Albani, Francesco
Alexandria
Alfieri, Count Vittorio
All Saints Church, Godshill
All Saints Church, Harewood
Almack’s
Alresford
America
Amey, Countess d’ (Madame Palmerini)
Amherst, Lord
Ami du Peuple’
Andalusia
Andrea del Sarto
Angelo, Henry
Answer of Sir Richard Worsley to the Epistle of Lady Worsley, The
Antiquities of Athens
(Stuart and Revett)
Appuldurcombe: as Worsley family seat; Sir Richard Worsley plans renovation of; purchase of lands adjacent to; as backdrop to portrait of Sir Richard; renovation and extension of; collection of books, art and antiquities moved to; Sir Richard destroys wife’s belongings at; Deerhurst questioned about his visit to; Sir Richard’s display of his wife at; Sir Richard no longer wishes to live at; as repository for Sir Richard’s collection; sale of objets d’art at; brief references
Aretino’s Postures
Argyll, Duchess of
Armistead, Elizabeth
Ashburton, John Dunning, Baron
see
Dunning, John, Baron Ashburton
Astle, Thomas
Aston, Henry Harvey
Athens
Aurora
Avret Bazaar, Constantinople
Baddeley, Sophia
Baccelli, Giovanna
Balfour, Frances
Banks, Sir Joseph
Bath
Bath of the Moderns, A
Bayntun, Lady Maria
Bearcroft, Edward
Beauharnais, Josephine
Beckford, William
Bedingfield, Edward
Belgium
Bentham, Jeremy
Bentham, Lieutenant-Colonel Samuel
Berwick, Lady
Bessborough, Countess of
Birch, Charles
Bisset, Reverend Doctor Alexander
Bisset (
née
Mordaunt), Harriot
Bisset, Maurice George: background; appearance and personality; as owner of Knighton; becomes acquainted with Sir Richard Worsley; and elections and politics; given a captain’s commission; relationship with Lady Worsley; possible feelings of Sir Richard towards; Lady Worsley gives birth to daughter of; visit to Maidstone baths; moves to Lewes; decision to elope with Lady Worsley; possible consequences of decision for; elopement plans; elopement; at Royal Hotel with Lady Worsley; elopement discovered; Sir Richard decides to prosecute; Farrer discovers whereabouts of; served with writ; and Sir Richard’s claim against; investigations into; leaves Royal Hotel; retreats to Southampton; hires attorneys; Sir Richard demands end of wife’s affair with; and death of his daughter; trial; depicted in caricatures; lifestyle and behaviour after the trial; referred to in
The Epistle from Lady Worsley to Sir Richard Worsley
; leaves Lady Worsley; life after leaving Lady Worsley; Lady Worsley gives birth to child of; brief references
Bisset, William
Blackheath
Bleakley, Horace
Bocland, General Maurice
Bois de Boulogne
Bolingbroke, Viscount
Bombelles, marquis de
Bon Ton
magazine
Bonaparte, Lucian
Bonaparte, Napoleon
see
Napoleon Bonaparte
Bosporus
Bouchier Smith, Joseph
Boulogne, Joseph, Chevalier de Saint-Georges
see
Saint-Georges, Joseph Boulogne, Chevalier de
Brewer, John
Brighton
Bristol
Brompton
Brook’s Club
Brown, Lancelot ‘Capability’
Bruce, Lady
Brussels
Buckingham, Marquess of
Buggin, Barrington
Bunbury, Sir Charles
Bunbury, Lady Sarah
Buriton
Burney, Fanny
Burney, Sarah
Byers, Isaac
Cadogan, Lady Mary
Cairo
Calais
Camelford, Baron
Campania
Canaletto
Cannon Hall
Caravaggio
Carlisle, Lady
Carlisle, Lord
Carmes Prison
Carr, John
Carraci, Annibale
Cateley, Ann
Catherine the Great
Cavendish, Lady Georgiana, Duchess of Devonshire
see
Devonshire, Lady Georgiana Cavendish, Duchess of
Cavendish, Lord
Chapelle, Monsieur de
Chapman, Captain and Mrs Isham
Chapone, Hester
Chesterfield, Lord
Cholmondeley, George James, 4th Earl of Cholmondeley
Christ Church, Oxford
Clarence, Duke of
Clarke, Richard
Clarke, William
Claude
Clermont, Lady
Cleveland Row, London
Cobbett, William
Cobham Park
Cochard, Charlotte Dorothy (formerly Charlotte Worsley), later Charlotte Hammond
Cochard family
Cockerell, Charles Robert
Coghill, Sir John and Lady
Coke, Lady Mary
Coldstream Regiment
Colman, Edward
Colman, Francis
Colman, Jane
see
Fleming (
née
Colman), Lady Jane
Commander, Hannah
Congratulatory Epistle from a Reformed Rake, A
Connolly, Joseph
Consistorial Episcopal Court
Constantinople
Cooper, Jack
Cork, Lady Anne
Cork and Orrery, 5th Earl of
Cornwallis, General
Corpus Christi College, Oxford
Correggio
Couchet, Françoise
County Armagh
County Sligo
Court of Arches
Court of Doctors’ Commons
see
Doctors’ Commons
Court of the King’s Bench;
Worsley
v.
Bisset
trial held in
see Worsley
v.
Bisset
trial
Court of Scandal, The
Covent Garden
Coventry, George William, Viscount Deerhurst
see
Deerhurst, George William Coventry, Viscount
Cowes
Coxheath
Coxheath Camp
Cramers, the Miss
Cranbourne, Lady
Craven, Lady
Crewe, Frances
Crimea
Croatia
Croome Court
Croydon
Cuckold’s Chronicle
Cumberland, Henry, Duke of
Custine, marquise de
Cuxhaven
Cuyp
Cycladic islands
Dalmatia
Danube
Dardanelles
Deerhurst, George William Coventry, Viscount: involved in elopement of Lady Worsley and Bisset; appearance; calls on Hesse with message for Sir Richard Worsley; Lady Worsley and Bisset are kept informed by; calls on Lady Worsley and Bisset; evidence at trial; relationship with Lady Worsley; marriage to Catherine Henley; and appearance of Peterborough and Bouchier Smith as witnesses; and Prince of Wales; at masquerade ball; brief references
Deffand, Madame du
Deighton, Philip
Derby, Earl of
Derby, Lady
Dermer, William
Devil Divorced, The
Devonshire, Duke of
Devonshire, Lady Georgiana Cavendish, Duchess of;
The Sylph
Devonshire House
Deyverdun, Jacques Georges
Dinedoff, Mr
Doctors’ Commons
Dodwell, Robert
Donkin, Robert Pye; trial transcripts
Dorset, Duke of
Dorsetshire Militia
Dover Street, London
Dresden
Drewe, Mr
Dublin
Dudley, Henry Bate
Duncannon, Lady Harriet
Dunning, John, Baron Ashburton
Eastern Europe
Egremont, Earl of
Egypt
Ekelso, Ann
Elgin, Lord
Elliott, Grace Dalrymple
England, Dick
English Chronicle
Eon, Chevalier d’
Epistle from Lady Worsley to Sir Richard Worsley, An
Epsom
Erskine, Thomas
Fanny Hill
Farnham
Farr, Evelyn
Farrer, James: introduced to Sir Richard Worsley; agrees to assume responsibility for court cases; discovers whereabouts of Lady Worsley and Bisset; serveswrits; explains matters to Sir Richard; conducts investigations; passes information to legal team; questioned at trial; brief references
Farrer, Oliver
Farrer & Co.
Farrington, Joseph
Female Coterie (Ladies Coterie)
Fenton, Dr
Fielding, Henry
Figg, Elizabeth
Fitzmaurice family
Fitzroy, Mrs
Fiume
Fleet, the
Fleming, Catherine Elizabeth
Fleming, Césarine
Fleming (
née
d’Houdetot), Ernestine Jeanne-Marie
Fleming, Hargrave William
Fleming, Colonel James
Fleming (
née
Colman), Lady Jane, later Baroness Harewood: marries John Fleming; birth of children; and Seymour’s appearance; as widow; marries Edwin Lascelles; retains her title; as mistress of Harewood; remains silent about her daughters’ fortunes; and potential husbands for her daughters; preparations for Seymour’s marriage; and commission for Seymour’s portrait; arranges New Year ball; and marriage of her daughter Jane; reconciled with Seymour
Fleming, Jane Margaret
see
Harrington, Jane Margaret Stanhope (
née
Fleming), 3rd Countess of
Fleming, Captain John
Fleming, Sir John
Fleming, John Lewis (formerly Jean Louis Hummell)
Fleming, Margaret Mary
Fleming, Seymour Dorothy
see
Worsley (
née
Fleming), Lady Seymour Dorothy
Foley, Lady Anne
Foljambe, Francis Ferrand
Fordyce, James:
Sermons to Young Women
Fort, Thomas
Foster, Lady Elizabeth
Fox, Charles James
Fox, Henry Richard, 3rd Lord Holland
France
see also
Paris
Frederick, Kitty
French Revolution
Garrick, David
Gatrell
Gatton
Gentleman’s Magazine
Genuine Anecdotes and Amorous Adventures of Sir Richard Easy and Lady Wagtail, The
George III, King
George, Prince of Wales
see
Wales, George, Prince of
Gibbon, Edward
Gildart, Richard
Gillray, James:
A Peep into Lady !!!!y’s Seraglio
;
Sir Richard Worse-than-Sly, Exposing his Wife’s Bottom
Godalming
Godfrey, Francis
Godshill
Godstone
Goethe
Goldsmith, Oliver;
She Stoops to Conquer
Gordon, Lord William
Gordon Riots
Gower, Lord
Grafton, Duke of
Graham, Dr
Graham, James, Marquess of Graham
Greece
Greenwood, Charles
Grenville, William Wyndham
Greuze, Jean-Baptiste
Greville, Mrs
Grimm, Baron von
Grosvenor, Lady Henrietta
Grosvenor, Richard, 1st Baron Grosvenor
Grosvenor
v.
Cumberland
Grosvenor Square, London
Grosvenor Street, London
Guercino
Guildford
Hale House
Hamilton, Lady Emma (formerly Emma Hart)
Hamilton, Sir William
Hammersley, Thomas
Hammond, Charles
Hammond (
née
Worsley, also known as Cochard), Charlotte Dorothy
Hampshire; 1779 by-election;
see also
names of places in Hampshire
Hampshire Chronicle
Hanger, George
Harewood
Harewood, Edwin Lascelles, 1st Baron
see
Lascelles, Edwin, later 1st Baron Harewood
Harewood, Lady Jane Fleming, Baroness
see
Fleming (
née
Colman), Lady Jane, later Baroness Harewood
Hargrave, Lieutenant-General William
Harley Street, London
Harrington, Caroline Stanhope, 2nd Countess of
Harrington, Charles Stanhope, 3rd Earl of
Harrington, Jane Margaret Stanhope (
née
Fleming), 3rd Countess of: birth; moves to Harewood following her mother’s remarriage; fortune; rejects Sir Richard Worsley as suitor; no engagement to Lord Algernon Percy; portrait; becomes engaged to Charles Stanhope; Seymour faces possibility of being shunned by; marries Charles Stanhope; supports Seymour
Harrington, William Stanhope, 2nd Earl of
Harrogate
Harvey, A.D.
Haydn, Franz Joseph: Paris Symphonies
Haymarket Theatre
Henley, Catherine
Herbert, Lord
Herculaneum
Hermitage Palace
Herne, Mr
Heseltine, James
Hesse, Elizabeth
Hesse, George
Hesse, John Frederick Adam
High Wycombe
Histoire de Dom B——-
Hoare’s bank
Hodges, Anna Sophia
Hogarth, William:
The Harlot’s Progress
;
Marriage A-la-Mode
Holland
Holland, Henry Richard Fox, 3rd Lord
Holland, Lady
Holmes, Catherine Troughear
Holmes, Reverend Leonard Troughear
Holmes family
Houdetot, César Louis Marie François d’Ange Houdetot, Comte d’
Houdetot, Ernestine Jeanne-Marie, later Ernestine Fleming
Howorth, Henry
Hummel, Johann Nepomuk
Hummell, Charles
Hummell, Jean Louis (later known as John Lewis Fleming)
Humphrey, William
Hungary
Hydra

Other books

Radiant Days by Elizabeth Hand
Eyes in the Sky by Viola Grace
La espada de San Jorge by David Camus
Nightmare’s Edge by Bryan Davis
Addicted by S. A. Archer, S. Ravynheart
The Case for God by Karen Armstrong