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CAROLINE ELIZABETH SARAH NORTON (18o8...

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Originally appearing in Volume V19, Page 797 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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CAROLINE ELIZABETH SARAH NORTON (18o8–1877)  , afterwards Lady Stirling-Maxwell,
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English writer, was born in
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London in r8o8 . One of the three beautiful granddaughters of Richard Brinsley Sheridan, daughters of his son Thomas, the " three Graces " of London society in the reign of George IV., she began to write before she was out of her teens . Her two sisters
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Helen and Georgina became respectively Lady Dufferin and duchess of Somerset . Lady Dufferin described the sisters to Disraeli with characteristic modesty . " Georgey's the beauty," she said, " and Carry's the wit, and I ought to be the good one, but I am not." At the age of seventeen, Caroline published amerry satire, The Dandies' Rout, illustrated by herself, and full of girlish high
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spirits and wit . Her first essay in serious verse was made in 1829 with The Sorrows of Rosalie, the next in 183o with The Undying One, a version of the legend of the Wandering Jew . She made an unfortunate
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marriage in 1827 with the Hon . George Norton,
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brother of Lord Grantley . After three years of protests on her
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part and good promises on his, she had
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left his house for her
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sister's, had "condoned" on further good promises, and had returned, to find matters worse . The
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husband's persecutions culminated in 1836 in an
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action brought against Lord Melbourne for seduction of his wife, which the
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jury decided against Mr Norton without leaving the box . The case against Lord Melbourne was so weak that it was suggested that Norton was urged to make the accusation by Melbourne's
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political enemies, in the hope that the
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scandal would prevent him from being premier when the princess Victoria should succeed William IV . In 1853 legal proceedings between Mrs Norton and her husband were again entered on, because he not only failed to pay her allowance, but demanded the proceeds of her books .

Mrs Norton made her own experience a plea for addressing to the

queen in 1855 an eloquent letter on the
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divorce
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laws, and her writings did much to ripen opinion for changes in the legal status of married
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women . George Meredith, in
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Diana of the Crossways, used her as the model for his " Diana." Mrs Norton was not a mere writer of elegant trifles, but was one of the priestesses of the " reforming " spirit; her Voice from the Factories (1836) was a most eloquent and rousing condemnation of child labour . The Dream, and other Poems appeared in 184o . Aunt Carry's
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Ballads (1847), dedicated to her nephews and nieces, are written with charming tenderness and grace . Later in
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life she produced three novels, Stuart of Dunleath (1851), Lost and Saved (1863), and Old
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Sir Douglas (1868) . Mrs Norton's last poem was the Lady of La Garaye (1862), her last publication the
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half-humorous, half-heroic story of The Rose of Jericho in 187o . She died on the 15th of
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June 1877 . Mr Norton died in 1875; and Mrs Norton in the last
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year of her life married Sir W . Stirling-Maxwell . See The Life of Mrs Norton, by Jane G . Perkins (1909) .

End of Article: CAROLINE ELIZABETH SARAH NORTON (18o8–1877)
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