Byron, Lord George Gordon (1788-1824)

For many, Byron was the spirit of the Romantic age.  His first published work in 1812 was Hours of Idleness, while his second, 'English Bards and Scotch Reviewers', was an attack on the critics who had dismissed the first.  However, things changed with the publication of his third poem Child Harold's Pilgrimage.  'I awoke one morning and found myself famous,' Byron remarked on the success of his poem.

Poetry may have brought him fame, but his looks and his lovers were a constant source of scandal. One of those lovers, the passionate Lady Caroline Lamb, provided the description of him that has lasted until today, "mad, bad and dangerous to know".

In April 1816 he left England never to return. Settling in Italy he began work on what many consider his greatest poem Don Juan, an epic satire in verse.  Today Don Juan is considered to be one of the greatest long poems every written in English language.

His last heroic venture came in 1823.  Spending 4,000 pounds of his own money he threw his support behind the campaign for Greek independence from the Ottoman Empire. In 1824 he fell ill and despite the attempts of doctors he died at Missolonghi, Greece at the age of 36.

When we two parted  In silence and tears,

Half broken-hearted, To sever for years,

Pale grew thy cheek and cold, Colder thy kiss -

Truly that hour foretold Sorrow to this.

When We Two Parted (1815)

Library Resources
eReserve
Web Resources

Library Resources

On the shelves

Poetry by Byron may be found in the following collections

Each of these collections include some background information about the poet.

  • An Anthology of poetry from Spenser to Arnold edited by William Witts. [Brief background to the poem "She Walks in Beauty" can be found on page 882.]
  • 80 Great poems from Chaucer to now selected by Geoff Page.

Criticism and interpretation

Biography

  • Lord Byron by Peter Brent with an introduction by Elizabeth Longford
  • Kindness of sisters: Annabella Milbanke and the destruction of the Byrons by David Crane

Romanticism

Web Resources

eBooks - online at Project Gutenberg

Much of Lord Byron's poetry is in the public domain and can be read or downloaded from the Project Gutenberg site.  You can also view some criticism and interpretation of his work from the same link.  Search here.

Online study notes

General

Additional resources

Reviews

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