The Adulteration of Bergamot: Difference between revisions
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The Earl apparently wrote ''The Adulteration of Bergamot'' as a private erotic tribute to [[Reform Act 1832 (nonfiction)|the Reform Act of 1832 (nonfiction)]], using his beloved [[Bergamot essential oil (nonfiction)]] as inspiration. | The Earl apparently wrote ''The Adulteration of Bergamot'' as a private erotic tribute to [[Reform Act 1832 (nonfiction)|the Reform Act of 1832 (nonfiction)]], using his beloved [[Bergamot essential oil (nonfiction)]] as inspiration. | ||
== Extant copies | == Extant copies == | ||
[[John Brunner]] says that he knows -- but cannot prove -- that [[Euphoriolanus]] owns at least one copy, and possibly more, | No copies are definitively known to exist (as of May 2016). | ||
However, various authors allege that copies exist. | |||
== Euphoriolanus == | |||
[[John Brunner]] says that he knows -- but cannot prove -- that [[Euphoriolanus]] owns at least one copy, and possibly more, | |||
Brunner furthermore charges that Euphoriolanus is running a secret Bergamot adulteration laboratory. | |||
== Fiction cross-reference == | == Fiction cross-reference == |
Revision as of 10:14, 22 May 2016
The Adulteration of Bergamot is a lost erotic novel by Charles Grey, 2nd Earl Grey (nonfiction).
History
The Earl apparently wrote The Adulteration of Bergamot as a private erotic tribute to the Reform Act of 1832 (nonfiction), using his beloved Bergamot essential oil (nonfiction) as inspiration.
Extant copies
No copies are definitively known to exist (as of May 2016).
However, various authors allege that copies exist.
Euphoriolanus
John Brunner says that he knows -- but cannot prove -- that Euphoriolanus owns at least one copy, and possibly more,
Brunner furthermore charges that Euphoriolanus is running a secret Bergamot adulteration laboratory.