[Lady Byron Vindicated by Harriet Beecher Stowe]@TWC D-Link book
Lady Byron Vindicated

CHAPTER V
12/37

He began by charging his wife with the very cruelty and deception which he was himself practising.

He had spread a net for her feet, and he accused her of spreading a net for his.

He had placed her in a position where she could not speak, and then leisurely shot arrows at her; and he represented her as having done the same by him.

When he attacked her in 'Don Juan,' and strove to take from her the very protection {227}of womanly sacredness by putting her name into the mouth of every ribald, he did a bold thing, and he knew it.

He meant to do a bold thing.


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