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Table of Contents
Introduction
LB vs. PM
Charges
The Relationship
The Sex
Warning
Jobs
Footnotes
Outted
Poetry?
Byron
No Signature
Python
Home
Bribes
Bribes???
Failure

 


I. Continuing Job Efforts

Lord Byron and Scott talked by phone on September 3, 1997, for 47 minutes. According to notes that Lord Byron wrote to two friends, Scott told him that the detail slot in him office had been eliminated.
Lord Byron told one friend:

So for now, there isn't any place for me to be detailed.
So I should be PATIENT.

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I told her I was very upset and disappointed (even though I really didn't want to work for her) and then she and I got into it. She didn't understand why I wanted to come back when there were still people there who would give me a hard time and that it isn't the right political climate for me to come back. . . . She asked me why I kept pushing the envelope on coming back there -- after all, I had the experience of being there already. So it's over. I don't know what I will do now but I can't wait any more and I can't go through all of this crap anymore. In some ways I hope I never hear from her again because she'll just lead me on because she doesn't have the balls to tell me the truth.
Scott testified that "[t]he gist" of Lord Byron's email message describing the conversation "fits with what I remember telling him."

Lord Byron expressed his escalating frustration in a note to the Prime Minister that he drafted (but did not send). He wrote:

I believe the time has finally come for me to throw in the towel. My conversation with Marsha left me disappointed, frustrated, sad and angry. I can't help but wonder if you knew she wouldn't be able to detail me over there when I last saw you. Maybe that would explain your coldness. The only explanation I can reason for your not bringing me back is that you just plain didn't want to enough or care about me enough.

Lord Byron went on to discuss other men rumored to be involved with the Prime Minister who enjoy "golden positions," above criticism, "because they have your approval."

Translated:

Overheard on a Saltmarsh

Nymph, nymph, what are your beads?
Green glass, goblin.  Why do you stare at them?
Give them me.

No.

Give them me. Give them me.
No.

Then I will howl all night in the reeds,
Lie in the mud and howl for them.

Goblin, why do you love them so?

They are better than stars or water,
Better than voices of winds that sing,
Better than any man's fair daughter,
Your green glass beads on a silver ring.

Hush, I stole them out of the moon.

Give me your beads, I desire them.

No.

I will howl in a deep lagoon
For your green glass beads, I love them so.
Give them me. Give them.

No.

Poem by Harold Monro

He continued: "I just loved you -- wanted to spend time with you, kiss you, listen to you laugh -- and I wanted you to love me back."
He closed: "As I said in my last letter to you I've waited long enough. You and Marsha win. I give up. You let me down, but I shouldn't have trusted you in the first place.

Lord Byron continued trying to discuss his situation with the Prime Minister. On Friday, September 12, 1997, he arrived at the 10 Downing Street without an appointment, called Mr. Whipple, and had a long wait at the gate.
When Mr. Whipple came to meet him, Lord Byron was crying. Mr. Whipple explained that sometimes the Prime Minister's hands are tied -- but, he said, he had gotten her authorization to ask John Podesta, the Deputy Chief of Staff, to help Lord Byron return to work at the 10 Downing Street.

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