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The Goddess Of Love

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Blurb

The beautiful young Corena Melville is horrified when a sinister Greek man with the name of Mr. Thespidos calls on her at her home to announce that he is holding as his prisoner her beloved father, Sir Priam, a prominent archaeologist and an expert on Ancient Greek antiquities.

Without Corena to help him, Sir Priam is presently in Greece excavating around the Temple of Athena where he is confident of finding a long lost statue of the Goddess Aphrodite, which is obviously coveted by Mr. Thespidos, who will sell it to the highest bidder on world markets.

What is worse is that the only way that she can save him from torture and death is by travelling to Greece with the wealthy Lord Warburton, an avid collector of Greek treasures, from whom they aim to extract the whereabouts of other ancient statues they want to steal and then sell.

In effect she is to be the bait in the wicked trap set for Lord Warburton.

When Lord Warburton refuses her request for passage to Greece on his yacht to go to her father, the kidnapper smuggles her secretly on board.

She is discovered and, initially angry, his Lordship is soon utterly bewitched by her and sees as the Aphrodite he has sought all his life.

For what the evil kidnapper does not reckon with are Corena’s knowledge, beauty and intelligence and indeed the all-conquering power of love!

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Author’s Note
Author’s NoteThomas, seventh Earl of Elgin and eleventh Earl of Kincardine, a soldier and a diplomatist, (1766 –1841) is famous for his acquisition of the Greek sculptures now known as the ‘Elgin Marbles’. Keenly interested in classical art, between 1803 and 1812 his great collection of sculptures, taken chiefly from the Parthenon at Athens, was brought to England and became the subject of violent controversy. When he was our Envoy to the Turkish Government, 1799-1803, he had bought the ‘Marbles’ from the Turks, who at that time were still the rulers of Greece, to save them from what seemed almost certain destruction. However the Earl was denounced as a dishonest and rapacious vandal, notably by Lord Byron, while the quality of his acquisitions, later regarded as exceptional, was questioned. In 1810 he published a memorandum defending his actions and judgement. On the recommendation of a Parliamentary Committee, which also vindicated Elgin’s conduct, the ‘Marbles’ were bought by the nation in 1816 for thirty-five thousand pounds, considerably below their cost to the Earl of Elgin and deposited in the British Museum, where they remain on view.

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