I'm sorry, I hot lost which capacitor you mentioned is which. You may try torefer them e.g. according to
this exampleThe C3 is the DC blocking capacitor, passing the operating HF current (very low impedance) but isolating the DC component. Often it is split into two units, one connected to positive and one to negative rail, it allows to separate the electrolytic (C1) by a small inductor, so relieve its current ripple loading.
The L1 is the main ballasting coil, limiting the lamp arc operating current (along with the operating frequency and the arc impedance).
The capacitor in the lamp starter assembly is effectively parallel to the arc, but in series with the filaments. When the rac is not existent yet, it forms a series LC with the L1 and "pulls" the operating frequency towards the corresponding resonant frequency, so it allows large current to flow, at the same time forms large voltage across the capacitor, so make the lamp to ignite.
And the capacitor in the lamp also completes the feedback circuit (signal picked up by the series connected feedback ring core transformer) when the lamp is not lit, so allows the oscillator to start.
After ignition, it becomes insignificant (has way higher reactance compare to the arc impedance), the ballast would operate the same way even when disconnected during operation, the current flows through the arc.