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       A Scandalous Life

      The Biography of Jane Digby

      MARY S. LOVELL

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       Dedication

      This book is dedicated to

      Joan Williams

      to whom I owe a great deal;

      she knows why.

      And also to my aunt

      Winifred Wooley

      who is a great lady.

       Epigraph

      ‘How could this Lady Ellenborough, whose scandalous life is known to all the world, have deceived you, Your Majesty?’

       Letter to King Ludwig I from his mistress’s maid

      Contents

       Cover

       Title Page

       8 Ianthe’s Secret 1833–1835

       9 A Duel for the Baroness 1836–1840

       10 False Colours 1840–1846

       11 The Queen’s Rival 1846–1852

       12 The Road to Damascus 1853

       13 Arabian Nights 1853–1854

       14 Honeymoon in Palmyra 1854–1855

       15 Wife to the Sheikh 1855–1856

       16 Return to England 1856–1858

       17 Alone in Palmyra 1858–1859

       18 The Massacre 1860–1861

       19 Visitors from England 1862–1863

       20 The Sitt el Mezrab 1863–1867

       21 Challenge by Ouadjid 1867–1869

       22 The Burtons 1870–1871

       23 Untimely Obituary 1871–1878

       24 Sunset Years 1878–1881

       25 Funeral in Damascus 1881

       Appendix: Last Will and Testament of the Hon. Jane Digby

       Epilogue

       Bibliography

       Index

       Acknowledgements

       About the Author

       Author’s Notes

       Notes

       Praise

       By Mary S. Lovell

       Copyright

       About the Publisher

       Preface

      Friends often ask me how I choose my subjects. The answer is that my subjects usually choose me, and so it was with Jane Digby.

      This book began at a cocktail party at the RAF Club in London in the spring of 1992 when Jane Digby’s name and her story came up in conversation. I had never heard of her, so I made a mental note to do some research and rapidly found myself in the early stages of an obsession that was to last several years. Who was Jane Digby, and why should she cast such an appeal?

      Born into the English aristocracy with every conceivable advantage in physical beauty, social position and wealth, Jane spent the final years of her life married to a desert prince. The Palladian mansions and gilded Mayfair salons of her youth made way for low black goat-hair tents and rugs spread upon wind-washed sands. Even now, with jet travel and motorised transport, the Syrian desert is one of the few lonely places left on earth. What unlikely circumstance, I wondered, had led Jane Digby there a century

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