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"Minnie Sidgwick was just twelve years old when her cousin, twenty-three-year-old Edward Benson, proposed to her in 1853. Edward went on to be Archbishop of Canterbury and little Minnie - as Mary Benson - to preside over Lambeth Palace. When [he] died [in 1896], Mary set up house in a Jacobean manor house with her friend Lucy Tait. She remained at the heart of her family of fiercely eccentric children; Arthur wrote the words for Land of Hope and Glory [music by Edward Elgar]; Fred became a successful author (his Mapp and Lucia novels still have a cult following); and Maggie a renowned Egyptologist. But none of the them was 'the marrying sort' and such a rackety family seemed destined for disruption. Drawing on the diaries and novels of thye Bensons themselves ... Bolt has created a ... family history of Victorian and Edwardian England."--Back cover.
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Previews available in: English
Subjects
Bishops' spouses, Biography, Lesbians, Large type books, Évêques, Biographies, Conjoints, Lesbiennes, Livres en gros caractères, Large print booksPeople
Mary Benson (1842-1918)Places
Great Britain, Grande-BretagneEdition | Availability |
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As good as God, as clever as the devil: the impossible life of Mary Benson
2012, Windsor/Paragon
in English
- Large print ed.
1445871165 9781445871165
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Edition Notes
Standard print ed. originally published: London : Atlantic, 2011.
Includes bibliographical references and index.
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