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#OTD in Irish History | 21 May:

#OTD in Irish History | 21 May:

1639 – Lord Deputy Thomas Wentworth imposes the Black Oath of loyalty to Charles I on all Ulster Scots over the age of 16.
1745 – Count Daniel O’Connell, a soldier in French and British services, is born in Derrynane, Co Kerry.
1799 – Bill of Union (later the Act of Union) introduced in Irish House of Commons.
1862 – Death of actor, John Drew. Born in Templeogue, Co Dublin, his family emigrated…


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The actress, poet, and author known as Perdita in her celebrity life was born Mary Darby, and at the tender age of 16 she married Tom Robinson, the bastard child of some rich guy. What Mary is most known for is her very public secret affair with the Prince of Wales, as well as her acting career. Both, despite her celebrity from them, were actually very brief. She was the prince’s first big love and he would write her impassioned love letters (which he signed “Florizel” and addressed to “Perdita” based on the play he was introduced to her in), which she blackmailed him with later when she needed some cash. When the teenage prince grew bored of their very public affair, he promptly replaced her with Grace Dalrymple Elliot, a rival tart.

“A Correspondent says that Dally the Tall gave a superb fete last night at her house near Tyburn Turnpike, in consequence of the Perdita’s departure for the Continent, whose superior charms have long been the daily subject of Dally’s envy and abuse.“
-The Morning Herald, 19 Oct. 1781

Mary was not only a foe of the other tricks of the town. She also rivaled the Duchess of Devonshire in her ability to start new fashion trends.

The second half of her life was extremely opposite to the extravagance of the first half. She was permanently separated from her super lame husband (believe me, SUPER lame) and devoted her life to her writings. She became paralyzed from the waist down in an impassioned act of love for the true love of her life, the super dreamy Banastre Tarleton. Their relationship lasted many years before his family (who hated Mary) finally got him to marry some teenager, leaving Mary a bitter, bitter (already feminist) author. She was very devoted to her art and hung out with only the coolest authors, such as uber-cool chick, Mary Wollstoncraft. However, she will eternally be remembered as Perdita, the dame who robbed the sweet prince of his virginity… probably.

Source: http://georgianaduchessofdevonshire.blogspot.com/2008/05/tart-of-week-mary-perdita-robinson.html

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