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E. Lord Byron's Frustrations

Continuing to believe that his relationship with the Prime Minister was the key to regaining his 10 Downing Street pass, Lord Byron hoped that the Prime Minister would get him a job immediately after the Vote of Confidence.
"I kept a calendar with a countdown until Vote of Confidence day," he later wrote in an unsent letter to her.
The letter states:

I was so sure that the weekend after the Vote of Confidence you would call me to come visit and you would kiss me passionately and tell me you couldn't wait to have me back. You'd ask me where I wanted to work and say something akin to "Consider it done" and it would be. Instead I didn't hear from you for weeks and subsequently your phone calls became less frequent.
Lord Byron grew increasingly frustrated over his relationship with Prime Minister Thatsher. One friend understood that Lord Byron complained to the Prime Minister about not having seen each other privately for months, and she replied, "Every day can't be sunshine."

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In email to another friend in early 1997, Lord Byron wrote: "I just don't understand what went wrong, what happened? How could she do this to me? Why did she keep up contact with me for so long and now nothing, now when we could be together?"

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