Her dam Briseis, had won the Oaks in the Grosvenor colours in 1807 and became a successful broodmare: apart from Corinne she produced The Student, beaten favourite in the 1817 Derby and Abjer, second in the same race three years later.
Ridden by Francis Buckle, Corinne won the race, defeating the favourite Loo, a filly owned by the Duke of Grafton.
After a summer break, Corinne returned to action at the Newmarket First October meeting, where she won a 200 guinea match over ten furlongs against Mr Thornhill's colt Steeltrap, carrying six pounds more than her rival.
[7] At the Second October meeting two weeks later, Corinne claimed a further 40 guineas for her owner, when her scheduled opponent (an unnamed colt owned by Mr Lake) failed to appear for a match race over the Abington Mile.
[8] Four days later, over the same course and distance, Corinne took part in a match between classic winners in which she failed to concede a pound in weight to the colt Interpreter.
[12] At the Houghton meeting on 2 November Corinne contested a spring handicap race over five furlongs in which she finished third of the four runners behind the three-year-old colt Barmecide.
[15] She made her seasonal debut on 18 April at the Newmarket Second Spring Meeting where she finished second to a colt name Ranter in a three-mile race for a £50 prize.
Later the same day she took part in a King's Purse for fillies and mares, also over three miles, in which she finished unplaced behind the 1819 Oaks winner Shoveler.
On the first day of the meeting she contested a King's Purse for fillies and mares which was run in a series of two-mile heats, the winner being the first horse to win twice.
[22] Corinne was bred to several leading stallions including Castrel, Comus and Tiresias, but does not appear to have produced any top class runners.