Caroline Elizabeth Sarah Norton

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Caroline Elizabeth Sarah Norton (22 March 180815 June 1877) was a famous British society beauty and author of the early and mid nineteenth century.

Contents

[edit] Youth and Marriage

Caroline was born in London, England to Thomas Sheridan and Caroline Henrietta Sheridan née Callander. Her father was an actor, soldier, and colonial administrator, and the son of the prominent Irish playwright and Whig statesman Richard Brinsley Sheridan. Her mother was the author of three novels.

In 1817, Thomas died in South Africa. Caroline afterwards lived in a Hampton Court Palace "grace and favour" apartment with her mother, four brothers and two sisters. The sisters' combined beauty and accomplishments led to their being collectively called the "Three Graces." [1] Her older sister, Helen, was a song-writer who married the 4th Baron Dufferin and Claneboye. Through her, Caroline became the aunt of the 1st Marquess of Dufferin and Ava, who later served as the third Governor General of Canada and eighth Viceroy of India. Her younger sister, Georgiana, considered the prettiest of the three, later became the Duchess of Somerset.

In 1827, Caroline married the Hon. George Chapple Norton, the brother of Lord Grantley, a union which quickly proved unhappy due to Norton's mental and physical abuse of his wife. A rigid, conventional man, Norton could not understand either Caroline's intellectual curiosity or her nonconformist vivaciousness.

During the early years of her marriage, despite her husband's misgivings, Caroline used her beauty, wit and family's Whig political connections to establish herself as a major society hostess. She became a friend to such literary and political luminaries of the era as Edward Bulwer-Lytton, Edward Trelawney, Fanny Kemble, Benjamin Disraeli, the future King Leopold I of Belgium and William Cavendish, 6th Duke of Devonshire. Social convention, however, did not allow her to publicly express the growing dissatisfaction she was feeling for her brutish, mentally unstimulating husband. In response, she turned to prose and poetry as a means of releasing her inner emotions. Her first book, The Sorrows of Rosalie (1829), was well received. The Undying One (1830), a romance founded upon the legend of the Wandering Jew soon followed.

[edit] Separation and Melbourne Scandal

In 1835, Caroline left her husband. He removed her children from her in revenge, and accused her having an affair with her close friend, Lord Melbourne, the then Whig Prime Minister. Norton also demanded £1400 from Melbourne, who refused to be blackmailed, so he then accused the Prime Minister in court. The resulting publicity almost brought down the government. After Norton was unable to produce evidence of a liaison, the scandal died away. Despite this turn of events, Norton continued to prevent Caroline from seeing her three sons and blocked her from receiving a divorce.

[edit] Writing and Political Activity

Due to her dismal domestic situation, Caroline became passionately involved in the passage of laws promoting social justice, especially those granting rights to married and divorced women. Her poems, A Voice from the Factories (1836), and The Child of the Islands (1845), had as their object the furtherance of her political views. Her efforts were largely successful in bringing about needed legislation. Primarily because of her intense campaigning, Parliament passed the 1839 Infant Custody Bill and the 1857 Divorce Act. At the same time, she continued to write in order to generate an income. Novels from her later life were Stuart of Dunleath (1851), Lost and Saved (1863), and Old Sir Douglas (1867).

[edit] Later life

Unable to divorce her husband, Caroline engaged in a secret five year affair with prominent Conservative politician Sidney Herbert in the early 1840s which ended with his marriage to another in 1846. She finally became free with the death of George Norton in 1875. In March of 1877, Caroline married Scottish historical writer and politician Sir W. Stirling Maxwell. She died three months later on .

A friend of author George Meredith in her later years, she became the inspiration for the character of Diana Warwick in his novel Diana of the Crossways, which was published in 1885.

[edit] References

  • Lee, Sidney. Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. LII, London: Smith, Elder & Co. 1897. (p. 85)googlebooks Accessed March 2, 2008

This article incorporates public domain text from: Cousin, John William (1910). A Short Biographical Dictionary of English Literature. London, J.M. Dent & sons; New York, E.P. Dutton.

[edit] Motes

  1. ^ From Fanny Kemble's comment in The Records of a Girlhood googlebooks Retrieved March 2, 2008

[edit] Select bibliography

  • Alan Chedzoy, A Scandalous Woman, The Story of Caroline Norton (London, 1992) [1]
  • English laws for women in the nineteenth century, 1854. (reprinted as Caroline Norton's defence Academy, Chicago 1982)
  • Letter to the Queen, 1855

[edit] See also

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