by Amanda Elyot
Table of Contents
Title Page
Copyright Page
Dedication
Epigraph
Nature - 1765-1786
One - The Earliest Days
Two - London Town
Three - My First Love
Four - To a Nunnery, Go!
Five - A Bluejacket at Whitehall
Six - The Temple of Health
Seven - Uppark Harry
Eight - The Wind Changes
Nine - Edgware Road
Ten - Growing Pains
Eleven - Pliny the Elder
Twelve - Indeed I Truly Am a Mother
Thirteen - An Unexpected Proposal
Bacchante - 1786-1791
Fourteen - Nasty Surprises
Fifteen - Settling In
Sixteen - Betrayed
Seventeen - Moving On
Eighteen - A Change of Heart
Nineteen - The Attitudes
Twenty - A King Unwittingly Plays My Hand
Twenty-one - A Modest Proposal
Twenty-two - Lunacy Triumphs
The Ambassadress - 1791-1800
Twenty-three - The Frenchies Give Us a Fright
Twenty-four - A Savior Arrives
Twenty-five - Treachery Unmasked
Twenty-six - I Am of Some Little Service to My Country
Twenty-seven - See, the Conquering Hero Comes
Twenty-eight - Tender Ministrations
Twenty-nine - An Unexpected Farewell
Thirty - Palermo
Thirty-one - Rough Justice
Thirty-two - The Nelson Touch
Thirty-three - Recalled!
Thirty-four - The Toasts of the Continent
Circe - 1800-1805
Thirty-five - A Hero’s Welcome
Thirty-six - Horatia
Thirty-seven - Copenhagen
Thirty-eight - The Countryside Beckons
Thirty-nine - Addio, il mio Marito
Forty - Widowed
Forty-one - This Time We’re Not So Lucky
Forty-two - Paradise Regained
Forty-three - Nelson Lost
Ariadne - 1806-1814
Forty-four - The Painful Losses Tumble Down
Forty-five - Within the Rules
Forty-six - Denouement
Afterword
Author’s Note
Acknowledgements
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
READERS GUIDE
PRAISE FOR
TOO GREAT A LADY
“In Too Great a Lady, Amanda Elyot gives us the authentic flavor of the raciness of the Georgian period, and offers an original insight into the personality of Lord Nelson, England’s greatest hero, through the eyes of his great love, Emma Hamilton.”
—Justin Reay, Admiralty historian and senior manager at the Bodleian Library, University of Oxford
PRAISE FOR THE OTHER NOVELS OF
AMANDA ELYOT
“Divinely conceived…white-hot passion . . . engrossing.”
—Publishers Weekly
“Blending mythology with history . . . [an] unforgettable journey.”
—Booklist
“Elyot keeps the action moving with lots of exciting drama . . . [a] fresh take on a legendary woman.”
—Library Journal
“Teeming with period detail . . . a sly peek into Austen’s England.”
—Lauren Willig, author of The Masque of the Black Tulip and
The Secret History of the Pink Carnation
“Richly textured . . . [a] fresh and wickedly clever tale.”
—New York Times bestselling author Mary Jo Putney
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First published by New American Library,
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First Printing, February 2007
Copyright © Leslie Carroll, 2007
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All rights reserved
REGISTERED TRADEMARK—MARCA REGISTRADA
LIBRARY OF CONGRESS CATALOGING-IN-PUBLICATION DATA:
Elyot, Amanda.
Too great a lady: the notorious, glorious life of Emma, Lady Hamilton: a novel/Amanda Elyot. p. cm.
eISBN : 978-1-101-09821-9
1. Hamilton, Emma, Lady, 1761?-1815—Fiction. 2. Nelson, Horatio Nelson, Viscount, 1758-1805—Fiction. 3. Hamilton, William, Sir, 1730-1803—Fiction. I. Title. PS3603.A77458T’.6—dc22 2006029841
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For Scott,
my hero and soul mate
GONE ARE THE SIRENS FROM THEIR SUNNY SHORE,
THE MUSES AFTERWARDS WERE HEARD NO MORE,
BUT OF THE GRACES THERE REMAINS BUT ONE—
GODS NAME HER EMMA, MORTALS, HAMILTON.
—Walter Savage Landor, 1801
ANYONE WHO BRAVES THE WORLD SOONER OR LATER
FEELS THE CONSEQUENCES OF IT.
—Lady Melbourne
26 April 1814
12 Temple Place
Within the Rules
My sin has found me out.
But it was a sin born of devotion to the greatest man England has ever produced, to protect the glorious name of Horatio Nelson from the taint of his detractors.
I owe the world a confession. It is true that last month I publicly denied the authenticity of a two-volume compendium purporting to be the love letters written betwixt myself and Lord Nelson. At the time, my vehement refutation proceeded from
the earnest desire to honor the dead, who cannot speak for themselves, as well as to respect the reputations of the living. I have a child to look after, who must command my devotions—Horatia Nelson, the only offspring of England’s greatest hero since St. George and a mother, who, as I once told a shopkeeper, was too great a lady to be mentioned.
In truth, I am the woman. I am the heroine of the greatest real-life love story in England’s long and tempestuous history. Robin and Marian, gamboling on the greensward in Nottingham, are perhaps more famous than Nelson and Emma, but they are quaint creatures of folklore, when all is said and done. The passions of Arthur, Guinevere, and Lancelot delight our senses, but they are merely glorious inventions of the writers’ pens. My passions are not fancies on the silver tongues of medieval minstrels. My passions live and breathe at this very moment, in the shadow of a guttering candle resting on a rickety table within a squalid flat in the confines of a debtors’ prison. I am the woman who began her life as the daughter of an illiterate farrier and his wife, only to rise, rung by slippery rung, through the ranks of society to become the most talked-about woman in Europe. I am she for whom the gallant Nelson risked all in the name of true love, bravely hazarding the censure of his monarch and his peers. When he sailed forth into battle to defend his king and country from their greatest enemies, it was my portrait that he wore about his neck as a talisman from his guardian angel, and he died with my name upon his lips.
As I write these words on the evening of my forty-ninth birthday, from my two windows overlooking Temple Place I can glimpse the grand illuminations outside the Surrey Theatre, and, in front of the marquee, the Surrey’s acrobats performing their circus tricks for the cheering crowds. All day, the bells of London have rung as any man will tell you they have not done in living memory. But the fanfare is not for me, though I have done many services for my country. They are celebrating Napoleon’s enforced abdication, thanks to England’s new champion—Arthur Wellesley. “Rule Britannia” is being sung boisterously in every tavern. Cries of “It’s all up with Boney!” echo through the fetid, narrow streets of the Rules. But as a condition of my imprisonment I am not permitted to attend a theatre or partake of the jubilation; a visit to a tavern or to a place of entertainment is deemed by the authorities to be “escaping.”
Yet perhaps it is just as well, for on this still-chilly night my heart cannot soar with those of John Bull. I despair to think that only a few short years since Trafalgar, the name of Wellington has already dimmed the star of Nelson in the memory of the common man. But it shall not eclipse his name—no! Not while I live to fan Nelson’s flame and remain the stalwart and protective keeper of his living legacy to his country.
If the particulars of my extraordinary life, including the confessions of my intimacy with the illustrious Lord Nelson, are to be disclosed with verisimilitude, they must perforce proceed from my own pen, and not from the greedy presses of scurrilous scandalmongers. I was the one who lived it, and my story is not a prize to be boarded and taken at will. Before heaven I vow to defend the truth, mine honor, and my heart with such unceasing broadsides that it will make the very devils of hell deaf from my cannons’ thunder. I am writing for my life, and that of my thirteen-year-old daughter, that I might earn enough from the sale of this memoir to break the debtors’ shackles and raise Nelson’s only child in a manner befitting her birthright. Whether to exalt or to excoriate, I intend to spare no one my candor.
Begging your indulgence, I hope you will be entertained, if nothing greater, by my extraordinary adventures on this earth, and I wish you every felicity.
Emma Hamilton
Nature
1765-1786
One
The Earliest Days
“Oh, Emy, it’s just a bit of fun is all!”
“Let go, Peter! I mean it, let me go!” Though he tried to hold me down, I kicked as hard as I could, and my long bare leg made contact with his belly. “Quit it, John Buckley!” Like a feral cat, I clawed at pimply Peter Flint with one hand whilst with my other I clutched at my calico, trying to keep my skirts down.
The boys pushed me onto my back in the mud by the edge of the road, heedless of my tears and shouts. I was nigh on twelve years old and they was fifteen or sixteen, taller than I was; and I knew they wouldn’t have thought twice about using their swagger sticks to beat me had I continued to refuse them. “Just give us a squeeze and a fondle,” John insisted. “Show us your pretty, round bubbies.” John grabbed hold of my bare feet and began to drag me into a ditch where we mightn’t be spotted from the road and where for certain my virtue would become just a memory.
“We just want to see what else it is you’re selling!” Peter reached into my apron pocket and grabbed a few lumps of coal. I peddled the coal by the roadside, helping my gammer, Sarah Kidd, put bread and bacon on the table for the seven of us who dwelt crammed together like coop hens in her little cruck cottage, “the Steps.” Laughing, as if to mock me, Peter lobbed the precious cargo across the road.
“I’m not on offer!” But the two country boys, loutish and poorly shod despite Hawarden’s windy damp, had taken the notion to misunderstand me.
Through the years, the same life lesson has appeared in my copybooks and recollections. In the world of men, it appears to be a maxim that a beautiful and charming woman is—regardless of her station or fortune—available. In their view, it all depends on her price. A truly extraordinary beauty, such as I was—for all the greatest painters of the day said so, and my portraits hung in every fashionable salon—was simply more costly to afford.
The ugly childhood memory returns. Just as I thought I was done for, along come Gammer up the Chester Road on her way back from the market in her rattletrap of an empty wagon, a picturesque peasant woman in her striped woolen garments, her graying hair hidden by a kerchief and a soft-brimmed hat. I heard the whish of her whip before I saw its long leather tongue catch fat John right between the shoulder blades, landing with a crack like the snap of a dry twig.
“Get!” she yelled, scaring the shite out of them. They backed away from me like jackrabbits, fumbling with their plackets. Leaving me lying in the ditch, they tried to scramble up to the road, but Gammer’s whip caught ’em both across the cheeks with a single blow. “There’s summat to remember the afternoon by,” she added. “And if I catch you near my Emy again, I’ll bost your heads afore you can come up with your next thought.” Then, for good measure, she took the whip to their hides again while they tried to outrun its reach. “Did they ’arm you, girl?” she demanded when she saw I was covered with scratches.
“No, but they was trying. You come just in time, Gammer. These cuts come mostly from fighting ’em off, though maybe John managed to brush one of my bubbies when he was reaching to tear my frock away. It’s too small for me anyhow, y’nau,” I said, looking down at the straining fabric. “Would’a bost itself soon enough.”
“I should ’ave noticed it myself, child,” Gammer said, clucking her tongue against her teeth. “I expect I just didn’t want to see what was plain as the nose on my face. You outgrew that bodice months ago and your skirts is barely reaching your ankles, but I was ’oping we might get ’em to last a mite longer.” She climbed down from the wagon, undid her kerchief, and dried my tears before folding me in her arms.
“You’re getting far too old to stand in the Chester Road anymore. You’re becoming a beauty, Emy, and I’ll not ’ave your charms exposed to everyone as passes. It’s time for me to find you a proper situation.”
“No!” My eyes filled with tears. “I love it ’ere! You can’t make me go!” I said, growing angrier by the moment. Truth was, I hated Hawarden and dreamed of a grander life filled with color and warmth, exactly the opposite of our chilly, damp, gray corner of North Wales. My father, Henry Lyon, died when I was but two months in this world, and Mary, my mam, had gone down to London in the hopes of better employment when I was but a tot. But Gammer was my world. I loved her more than anyone and could not begin to
imagine being without her.
Gammer tenderly stroked my head until my sobs subsided into whimpers. Then, after scrutinizing my disheveled condition, she concluded, “A lick and a promise’ll do for washing these cuts clean, y’nau? Now ’op up beside me, girl, so we can get on ’ome afore the deeleet fades.”
After supper she tucked me into bed as if I were still her little Emy. My grandfather and Uncle William dozed over the table, Grandpa snoring enough to shake the rafters loose. My aunts knit stockings by the guttering flames of our tallow candles, and, muttering almost silently to themselves as they counted their stitches, took no notice of anything else. Gammer sat beside me and struck up a pretty, rustic air. I joined her on the second verse, inventing a light harmony. When she turned her face to mine at the end of the song, there were tiny teardrops in the corners of her eyes. “You’ve truly the voice of one of the angels, my girl,” she said softly. Her words sounded like music, despite—or perhaps because of—her countrified speech.
“I don’t want to be leaving you, Gammer,” I sniffled. “I don’t want to take a position anywhere else.”
“Husht thee naise,” she said gently, smoothing a curl off my forehead. “Hawarden’s no good place for you anymore. The world’s a big wide thing, child, and you best be moving into it, so’s you can begin to make your way on your own. You might even learn to curb that fierce temper of yours, which could only be to the good.” Gammer leaned down and kissed the top of my head. She smelt of the turnips she’d boiled and mashed for our supper and I was missing her even before I was gone. “Now, shut those deep blue eyes of yours, Emy, and we’ll talk more about it in the deeleet.”