From the Writing Desk of
Miss L. E. Watson
Miss L. E. Watson
There are few things more dangerous than a woman with a pen and an opinion.
At her writing desk, Miss Watson records events both scandalous and sincere.
Expect musings, memoirs, dispatches from the front (of society), and the occasional thinly veiled critique disguised as literary reflection.
Expect musings, memoirs, dispatches from the front (of society), and the occasional thinly veiled critique disguised as literary reflection.
Lucine’s Most Notorious Dispatches
A Cautionary List of Gentlemen to Avoid
In which Lucine advises caution, and readers immediately disregard it.
26 Apr 1835
The Strategic Deployment of Fans
(A Treatise on Flirtation, Subtlety, and Blunt Force Charm)
23 Apr 1835
Musings on Love Letters
Ink fades. Scandal does not.
19 Apr 1835
Archive of Missives
A Debutante, Improperly Announced
She has received your threats. She is filing them alphabetically. Some with colour-coded vengeance.
9 Jun 1835
A Dramatic Debut, Indeed
There was no thunderclap. Just a whisper—and, if one is lucky, a scandal.
12 May 1835
A Brief Perusal (and Other Lies I Tell Myself)
She meant only to look. She left with a gentleman, eighteen books, and a problem.
4 May 1835
A Whisper from the Writing Desk
Lucine occasionally pens private dispatches. Would you care to be improperly informed?
Lucine keeps confidences. Unless tempted otherwise.