Lady Dudley

E1012840

Lady Dudley is a central aristocratic figure in Honoré de Balzac’s novel "The Lily of the Valley," known for her beauty, social influence, and complex romantic entanglements.

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All labels observed (1)

Label Occurrences
Lady Dudley canonical 1

Statements (46)

Predicate Object
instanceOf aristocrat
fictional character
literary character
appearsIn The Lily of the Valley NERFINISHED
appearsInGenre French realist novel
appearsInWorkBy Honoré de Balzac NERFINISHED
associatedWithTheme adultery
desire versus duty
moral conflict
belongsTo English aristocracy
contrastedWith Henriette de Mortsauf NERFINISHED
createdBy Honoré de Balzac NERFINISHED
fictionalUniverse La Comédie humaine NERFINISHED
firstAppearance The Lily of the Valley NERFINISHED
gender female
hasReputation coquette
dangerous lover
hasRivalryWith Henriette de Mortsauf NERFINISHED
hasRomanticRelationshipWith Félix de Vandenesse NERFINISHED
hasTitle Lady NERFINISHED
hasTrait manipulative
passionate
proud
seductive
includedIn Balzac’s gallery of female characters
influences Félix de Vandenesse NERFINISHED
languageOfCharacter French
literaryMovement Realism NERFINISHED
maritalStatus married
medium novel
narrativeFunction catalyst for Félix’s emotional development
nationality English
notableFor beauty
romantic entanglements
social influence
partOf La Comédie humaine NERFINISHED
residesIn England (origin) NERFINISHED
France (in the novel) NERFINISHED
roleInNarrative antagonist in love plot
temptress
settingOfActivity French high society
socialStatus noblewoman
spouse Lord Dudley NERFINISHED
symbolizes sensual passion
worldly temptation
workPublicationYear 1835

Referenced by (1)

Full triples — surface form annotated when it differs from this entity's canonical label.