After Napoleon's final demise Byron accumulated keepsakes:
A lock of his hair.
Snuffboxes with his portrait.
Gold coins with the depiction of the Emperor.
A Napoleon cameo pin (which he had famously given to Lady Blessington in Genoa before changing his mind the next day).
His coronation robes (reserved, but never actually picked up, as he was at this time leaving for Geneva).
Writing paper from the imperial bureau at Malmaison, stamped with the Napoleonic eagle.
Byron, according to Leigh Hunt, also gleefully accepted his mother-in-law’s maiden name ‘Noel’ as an attachment preceding ‘Byron’ so that he, too, may sign his initials ‘NB’— “Bonaparte and I are the only public persons whose initials are the same.”
ПРЯДЬ ВОЛОС, ИМПЕРАТОРСКАЯ БУМАГА, СМЕНА ИМЕНИ (!!!). Байрон, ты просто как девочка-фанатка 30 seconds to Mars.