fbpx
Wikipedia

Byronic hero

The Byronic hero is a variant of the Romantic hero as a type of character, named after the English Romantic poet Lord Byron.[1] Both Byron's own persona as well as characters from his writings are considered to provide defining features to the character type.

Byron c. 1816, by Henry Harlow

The Byronic hero first reached a very wide public in Byron's semi-autobiographical epic narrative poem Childe Harold's Pilgrimage (1812–1818). Historian and critic Lord Macaulay described the character as "a man proud, moody, cynical, with defiance on his brow, and misery in his heart, a scorner of his kind, implacable in revenge, yet capable of deep and strong affection".[2] Despite Byron's clarifying Childe was a fictitious character in the preface of the work, "the public immediately associated Byron with his gloomy hero", with readers "convinced ... that Byron and Childe were one and the same".[3]

Byron's poems with Oriental settings show more "swashbuckling" and decisive versions of the type. Later works show Byron progressively distancing himself from the figure by providing alternative hero types, like Sardanapalus (Sardanapalus), Juan (Don Juan) or Torquil ("The Island"), or, when the figure is present, by presenting him as less sympathetic (Alp in "The Siege of Corinth") or criticising him through the narrator or other characters.[4] Byron would later attempt such a turn in his own life when he joined the Greek War of Independence, with fatal results,[5] though recent studies show him acting with greater political acumen and less idealism than previously thought.[6] The actual circumstances of his death from disease in Greece were unglamorous in the extreme, but back in England these details were ignored in the many works promoting his myth.[7]

Origins edit

The initial version of the type in Byron's work, Childe Harold, draws on a variety of earlier literary characters including Hamlet, Goethe's Werther (1774), and William Godwin's Mr. Faulkland in Caleb Williams (1794); he was also noticeably similar to René, the hero of Chateaubriand's novella of 1802, although Byron may not have read this.[8] Ann Radcliffe's "unrepentant" Gothic villains (beginning in 1789 with the publication of The Castles of Athlin and Dunbayne, a Highland Story) also foreshadow a moody, egotistical Byronic "villain" nascent in Byron's own juvenilia, some of which looks back to Byron's Gordon relations, Highland aristocrats or Jacobites now lost between two worlds.[9][10] For example, in Byron's early poem "When I Roved a Young Highlander" (1808), we see a reflection of Byron's youthful Scottish connection, but also find these lines:

As the last of my race, I must wither alone,
And delight but in days, I have witness'd before:[11]

These lines echo William Wordsworth's treatment of James Macpherson's Ossian in "Glen-Almain" (1807):

That Ossian, last of all his race!
Lies buried in this lonely place.[12][13]

Thus Byron's poem seems to show that a brooding, melancholy influence not only from Wordsworth but also from Macpherson was very much on his mind at an early date.[14]

After Childe Harold's Pilgrimage, the Byronic hero made an appearance in many of Byron's other works, including his series of poems on Oriental themes: The Giaour (1813), The Corsair (1814) and Lara (1814); and his closet play Manfred (1817). For example, Byron described Conrad, the pirate hero of his The Corsair (1814), as follows:

That man of loneliness and mystery,
Scarce seen to smile, and seldom heard to sigh— (I, VIII)

and

He knew himself a villain—but he deem'd
The rest no better than the thing he seem'd;
And scorn'd the best as hypocrites who hid
Those deeds the bolder spirit plainly did.
He knew himself detested, but he knew
The hearts that loath'd him, crouch'd and dreaded too.
Lone, wild, and strange, he stood alike exempt
From all affection and from all contempt: (I, XI)[15]

Public reaction and following edit

Admiration of Byron continued to be fervent in the years following his death, despite claims from author Peter L. Thorslev that the literary culture of the Byronic Hero "died in England almost with Byron".[16] Notable fans included Alfred Tennyson: fourteen at the time of Byron's death, and so grieved at the poet's passing, he carved the words "Byron is dead" on a rock near his home in Somersby, declaring the "world had darkened for him".[17] However, the admiration of Byron as a character led some fans to emulate characteristics of the Byronic hero. Foremost was Wilfrid Scawen Blunt, who took the Byron cult to remarkable extremes. His marriage to Byron's granddaughter,[18] taking a "Byron pilgrimage" around the Continent and his anti-imperialist stance that saw him become an outcast just like his hero cemented his commitment to emulating the Byronic character.[19] For professor David Michael Jones, the Byronic Hero becomes an expression of masculinity that "is changed, repressed, and reformatted through the long nineteenth century".[20]

Literary usage and other influences edit

 
Laurence Olivier as the Byronic hero Heathcliff in an adaptation of Emily Brontë's Wuthering Heights

Byron's influence is manifest in many authors and artists of the Romantic movement and writers of Gothic fiction during the 19th century. Lord Byron was the model for the title character of Glenarvon (1816) by Byron's erstwhile lover Lady Caroline Lamb; and for Lord Ruthven in The Vampyre (1819) by Byron's personal physician, John William Polidori. Edmond Dantes from Alexandre Dumas' The Count of Monte Cristo (1844),[21] Heathcliff from Emily Brontë's Wuthering Heights (1847), and Rochester from Charlotte Brontë's Jane Eyre (1847) are other later 19th-century examples of Byronic heroes.[22]

In later Victorian literature, the Byronic character only seemed to survive as a solitary figure, resigned to suffering.[23] However, Charles Dickens' representation of the character is more complex than that. Steerforth in David Copperfield manifests the concept of the "fallen angel" aspect of the Byronic hero; his violent temper and seduction of Emily should turn the reader, and indeed David, against him. But it does not. He still retains a fascination, as David admits in the aftermath of discovering what Steerforth has done to Emily.[24] He may have done wrong, but David cannot bring himself to hate him. Steerforth's occasional outbreaks of remorse reveal a tortured character,[25] echoing a Byronic remorse. Harvey concludes that Steerforth is a remarkable blend of both villain and hero, and exploration of both sides of the Byronic character.

Scholars have also drawn parallels between the Byronic hero and the solipsist heroes of Russian literature. In particular, Alexander Pushkin's famed character Eugene Onegin echoes many of the attributes seen in Childe Harold's Pilgrimage, particularly, Onegin's solitary brooding and disrespect for traditional privilege. The first stages of Pushkin's poetic novel Eugene Onegin appeared twelve years after Byron's Childe Harold's Pilgrimage, and Byron was of obvious influence (Vladimir Nabokov argued in his Commentary to Eugene Onegin that Pushkin had read Byron during his years in exile just prior to composing Eugene Onegin).[26] The same character themes continued to influence Russian literature, particularly after Mikhail Lermontov invigorated the Byronic hero through the character Pechorin in his 1839 novel A Hero of Our Time.[27]

The Byronic hero is also featured in many contemporary novels, and has played a role in modern literature as the precursor to a popular form of antihero. Erik, the Phantom from Gaston Leroux's Phantom of the Opera (1909–1910) is a well-known example from the first half of the twentieth century,[28] while Ian Fleming's James Bond (if not his cinematic incarnations) shows all the earmarks in the second half: "Lonely, melancholy, of fine natural physique, which has become in some way ravaged ... dark and brooding in expression, of a cold and cynical veneer, above all enigmatic, in possession of a sinister secret."[29]

Modernity edit

Different iterations of the Byronic Hero are also recognisable in pop culture. Many researchers have already connected the figure of the Byronic Hero to mainstream Hollywood characters: Christopher Nolan's interpretation of Bruce Wayne as superhero vigilante Batman has been described as embodying “the dark side of human possibilities”, where his “moral code does not align with the law.”[30] Christian Bale's portrayal of the character in the Dark Knight trilogy was described by Nolan as "exactly the balance of darkness and light that we were looking for." The Star Wars franchise has also repeatedly dealt with themes of temptation and corruption relating to the central conflict between a "Light Side" and a "Dark Side", as embodied by the character of Anakin Skywalker.[31] The undisputed villain of the original Star Wars trilogy achieves some sense of redemption when audiences get insight of the manipulation and mind control he became the victim of, which inevitably led him to become the infamous Darth Vader. This ambiguity and his close relationship with darkness (literal and figuratively) places him right in the centre of the Byronic Hero archetype.

Byronic heroine edit

There are also suggestions of the potential of a Byronic heroine in Byron's works. Charles J. Clancy argues that Aurora Raby in Don Juan possesses many of the characteristics typical of a Byronic hero. Described as "silent, lone" in the poem, her life has indeed been spent in isolation – she has been orphaned from birth. She validates Thorslev's assertion that Byronic heroes are "invariably solitaries".[32] Yet, like her male counterpart, she evokes an interest from those around her, "There was awe in the homage which she drew".[33] Again, this is not dissimilar to the description of the fascination that Byron himself encountered wherever he went.[34] Her apparent mournful nature is also reminiscent of the regretful mien of the Byronic hero. She is described as having deeply sad eyes, "Eyes which sadly shone, as Seraphs' shine".[35] This was a specific characteristic of the Byronic hero.[33] This seems to express a despair with humanity, not unlike the despair present in Byron's Cain, as Thorslev notes. She herself admits to despairing at "man's decline", therefore this brings her into direct comparison with Cain's horror at the destruction of humanity.[35]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ "The Literary Overview: Heroes" (PDF). Fox Valley Lutheran High School.
  2. ^ Christiansen, 201
  3. ^ Sandgren, Retta Aleen. The Byronic hero in Childe Harold's pilgrimage, the four Turkish tales, Manfred, and Don Juan. Diss. 2013.
  4. ^ Poole, 17
  5. ^ Christiansen, 202
  6. ^ see Beaton
  7. ^ Christiansen, 202, 213
  8. ^ Christiansen, 201–203
  9. ^ Cairney, Christopher (1995). The Villain Character in the Puritan World: an Ideological Study of Richardson, Radcliffe, Byron and Arnold. Columbia, Missouri: University of Missouri. ProQuest 304205304.
  10. ^ Alexandre-Garner, Corinne (2004). Borderlines and Borderlands:Confluences XXIV. Paris: University of Paris X-Nanterre. pp. 205–216. ISBN 2907335278.
  11. ^ Byron, George Gordon. "When I Roved a Young Highlander". Wikisource. Wikimedia Foundation. Retrieved 21 November 2017.
  12. ^ Wordsworth, William. "Glen-Almain, or the Narrow Glen". Wikisource. Wikimedia Foundation. Retrieved 21 November 2017.
  13. ^ Wordsworth, William (1807). Poems, in Two Volumes. London: Longman, Hurst, Rees, and Orme. pp. 16–17. Retrieved 21 November 2017.
  14. ^ Cairney, Chris (2018). (PDF). Culture in Focus. 1 (1): 105. Archived from the original (PDF) on 23 July 2018. Retrieved 30 April 2018.
  15. ^ Christiansen, 203; sections VIII-XI of Canto I contain an extended account of Conrad's character, see Wikisource text
  16. ^ Thorslev, Peter L. The Byronic hero: Types and prototypes. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1962.
  17. ^ McCarthy 2002, p. 555.
  18. ^ McCarthy 2002, p. 562.
  19. ^ McCarthy 2002, p. 564.
  20. ^ Jones, David Michael. The Secret History of Romance Masculinity: The Byronic Hero and the Novel, 1814-1914. University of Connecticut, 2012.
  21. ^ Dumas 1844, p. 247.
  22. ^ McCarthy 2002, p. 557.
  23. ^ Harvey 1969, p. 306.
  24. ^ Harvey 1969, p. 309.
  25. ^ Harvey 1969, p. 308.
  26. ^ Christiansen, 218–222
  27. ^ Christiansen, 220, note
  28. ^ Markos 2013, p. 162.
  29. ^ Amis, 26
  30. ^ Johnson, Megan Jeanine. Recapturing the Byronic Hero: Christopher Nolan's Batman Films (Bachelor's thesis, University of Arizona, Tucson, USA). 2014.
  31. ^ Dlask, Jan. "Byronic Archetype in Star Wars Saga." (2021).
  32. ^ Clancy 1979, p. 29.
  33. ^ a b Clancy 1979, p. 30.
  34. ^ McCarthy 2002, p. 161.
  35. ^ a b Clancy 1979, p. 31.

References edit

  • Amis, Kingsley. The James Bond Dossier. Jonathan Cape, 1965.
  • Christiansen, Rupert, Romantic Affinities: Portraits From an Age, 1780–1830, 1989, Cardinal, ISBN 0-7474-0404-6
  • Clancy, Charles J. (1979). "Aurora Raby In Don Juan: A Byronic Heroine". Keats-Shelley Journal. New York: Keats-Shelley Association Of America. 28: 28–34. JSTOR 30212839.
  • Dumas, Alexandre (1844). The Count Of Monte Cristo. Hertforshire: Wordsworth Classics. ISBN 978-1-85326-733-8.
  • Harvey, William R. (1969). "Charles Dickens And The Byronic Hero". Nineteenth-Century Fiction. California: University of California Press. 24 (3): 305–316. doi:10.2307/2932860. JSTOR 2932860.
  • McCarthy, Fiona (2002). Byron: Life And Legend. London: John Murray. ISBN 0-7195-5621X.
  • Markos, Louis (2013). Heaven And Hell: Visions Of The Afterlife In Western Poetic Tradition. Eugene: Cascade. ISBN 978-1-62032-750-0.
  • Poole, Gabriele. "The Byronic Hero, Theatricality and Leadership". The Byron Journal. Volume 38, issue 1, 2010: pp. 7–18. doi:10.3828/bj.2010.4.
  • Beaton, Roderick. Byron's War. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2013.
  • Thorslev, Peter L. "The Byronic Hero And Heroic Tradition". The Byronic Hero. Minnesota: University Press, 1962.

External links edit

  • Norton topics online, "The Satanic and Byronic Hero"
  • Immortals and Vampires and Ghosts, Oh My!: Byronic Heroes in Popular Culture

byronic, hero, variant, romantic, hero, type, character, named, after, english, romantic, poet, lord, byron, both, byron, persona, well, characters, from, writings, considered, provide, defining, features, character, type, byron, 1816, henry, harlowthe, first,. The Byronic hero is a variant of the Romantic hero as a type of character named after the English Romantic poet Lord Byron 1 Both Byron s own persona as well as characters from his writings are considered to provide defining features to the character type Byron c 1816 by Henry HarlowThe Byronic hero first reached a very wide public in Byron s semi autobiographical epic narrative poem Childe Harold s Pilgrimage 1812 1818 Historian and critic Lord Macaulay described the character as a man proud moody cynical with defiance on his brow and misery in his heart a scorner of his kind implacable in revenge yet capable of deep and strong affection 2 Despite Byron s clarifying Childe was a fictitious character in the preface of the work the public immediately associated Byron with his gloomy hero with readers convinced that Byron and Childe were one and the same 3 Byron s poems with Oriental settings show more swashbuckling and decisive versions of the type Later works show Byron progressively distancing himself from the figure by providing alternative hero types like Sardanapalus Sardanapalus Juan Don Juan or Torquil The Island or when the figure is present by presenting him as less sympathetic Alp in The Siege of Corinth or criticising him through the narrator or other characters 4 Byron would later attempt such a turn in his own life when he joined the Greek War of Independence with fatal results 5 though recent studies show him acting with greater political acumen and less idealism than previously thought 6 The actual circumstances of his death from disease in Greece were unglamorous in the extreme but back in England these details were ignored in the many works promoting his myth 7 Contents 1 Origins 2 Public reaction and following 3 Literary usage and other influences 3 1 Modernity 4 Byronic heroine 5 See also 6 Notes 7 References 8 External linksOrigins editThe initial version of the type in Byron s work Childe Harold draws on a variety of earlier literary characters including Hamlet Goethe s Werther 1774 and William Godwin s Mr Faulkland in Caleb Williams 1794 he was also noticeably similar to Rene the hero of Chateaubriand s novella of 1802 although Byron may not have read this 8 Ann Radcliffe s unrepentant Gothic villains beginning in 1789 with the publication of The Castles of Athlin and Dunbayne a Highland Story also foreshadow a moody egotistical Byronic villain nascent in Byron s own juvenilia some of which looks back to Byron s Gordon relations Highland aristocrats or Jacobites now lost between two worlds 9 10 For example in Byron s early poem When I Roved a Young Highlander 1808 we see a reflection of Byron s youthful Scottish connection but also find these lines As the last of my race I must wither alone And delight but in days I have witness d before 11 These lines echo William Wordsworth s treatment of James Macpherson s Ossian in Glen Almain 1807 That Ossian last of all his race Lies buried in this lonely place 12 13 Thus Byron s poem seems to show that a brooding melancholy influence not only from Wordsworth but also from Macpherson was very much on his mind at an early date 14 After Childe Harold s Pilgrimage the Byronic hero made an appearance in many of Byron s other works including his series of poems on Oriental themes The Giaour 1813 The Corsair 1814 and Lara 1814 and his closet play Manfred 1817 For example Byron described Conrad the pirate hero of his The Corsair 1814 as follows That man of loneliness and mystery Scarce seen to smile and seldom heard to sigh I VIII andHe knew himself a villain but he deem d The rest no better than the thing he seem d And scorn d the best as hypocrites who hid Those deeds the bolder spirit plainly did He knew himself detested but he knew The hearts that loath d him crouch d and dreaded too Lone wild and strange he stood alike exempt From all affection and from all contempt I XI 15 Public reaction and following editAdmiration of Byron continued to be fervent in the years following his death despite claims from author Peter L Thorslev that the literary culture of the Byronic Hero died in England almost with Byron 16 Notable fans included Alfred Tennyson fourteen at the time of Byron s death and so grieved at the poet s passing he carved the words Byron is dead on a rock near his home in Somersby declaring the world had darkened for him 17 However the admiration of Byron as a character led some fans to emulate characteristics of the Byronic hero Foremost was Wilfrid Scawen Blunt who took the Byron cult to remarkable extremes His marriage to Byron s granddaughter 18 taking a Byron pilgrimage around the Continent and his anti imperialist stance that saw him become an outcast just like his hero cemented his commitment to emulating the Byronic character 19 For professor David Michael Jones the Byronic Hero becomes an expression of masculinity that is changed repressed and reformatted through the long nineteenth century 20 Literary usage and other influences edit nbsp Laurence Olivier as the Byronic hero Heathcliff in an adaptation of Emily Bronte s Wuthering HeightsByron s influence is manifest in many authors and artists of the Romantic movement and writers of Gothic fiction during the 19th century Lord Byron was the model for the title character of Glenarvon 1816 by Byron s erstwhile lover Lady Caroline Lamb and for Lord Ruthven in The Vampyre 1819 by Byron s personal physician John William Polidori Edmond Dantes from Alexandre Dumas The Count of Monte Cristo 1844 21 Heathcliff from Emily Bronte s Wuthering Heights 1847 and Rochester from Charlotte Bronte s Jane Eyre 1847 are other later 19th century examples of Byronic heroes 22 In later Victorian literature the Byronic character only seemed to survive as a solitary figure resigned to suffering 23 However Charles Dickens representation of the character is more complex than that Steerforth in David Copperfield manifests the concept of the fallen angel aspect of the Byronic hero his violent temper and seduction of Emily should turn the reader and indeed David against him But it does not He still retains a fascination as David admits in the aftermath of discovering what Steerforth has done to Emily 24 He may have done wrong but David cannot bring himself to hate him Steerforth s occasional outbreaks of remorse reveal a tortured character 25 echoing a Byronic remorse Harvey concludes that Steerforth is a remarkable blend of both villain and hero and exploration of both sides of the Byronic character Scholars have also drawn parallels between the Byronic hero and the solipsist heroes of Russian literature In particular Alexander Pushkin s famed character Eugene Onegin echoes many of the attributes seen in Childe Harold s Pilgrimage particularly Onegin s solitary brooding and disrespect for traditional privilege The first stages of Pushkin s poetic novel Eugene Onegin appeared twelve years after Byron s Childe Harold s Pilgrimage and Byron was of obvious influence Vladimir Nabokov argued in his Commentary to Eugene Onegin that Pushkin had read Byron during his years in exile just prior to composing Eugene Onegin 26 The same character themes continued to influence Russian literature particularly after Mikhail Lermontov invigorated the Byronic hero through the character Pechorin in his 1839 novel A Hero of Our Time 27 The Byronic hero is also featured in many contemporary novels and has played a role in modern literature as the precursor to a popular form of antihero Erik the Phantom from Gaston Leroux s Phantom of the Opera 1909 1910 is a well known example from the first half of the twentieth century 28 while Ian Fleming s James Bond if not his cinematic incarnations shows all the earmarks in the second half Lonely melancholy of fine natural physique which has become in some way ravaged dark and brooding in expression of a cold and cynical veneer above all enigmatic in possession of a sinister secret 29 Modernity edit Different iterations of the Byronic Hero are also recognisable in pop culture Many researchers have already connected the figure of the Byronic Hero to mainstream Hollywood characters Christopher Nolan s interpretation of Bruce Wayne as superhero vigilante Batman has been described as embodying the dark side of human possibilities where his moral code does not align with the law 30 Christian Bale s portrayal of the character in the Dark Knight trilogy was described by Nolan as exactly the balance of darkness and light that we were looking for The Star Wars franchise has also repeatedly dealt with themes of temptation and corruption relating to the central conflict between a Light Side and a Dark Side as embodied by the character of Anakin Skywalker 31 The undisputed villain of the original Star Wars trilogy achieves some sense of redemption when audiences get insight of the manipulation and mind control he became the victim of which inevitably led him to become the infamous Darth Vader This ambiguity and his close relationship with darkness literal and figuratively places him right in the centre of the Byronic Hero archetype Byronic heroine editThere are also suggestions of the potential of a Byronic heroine in Byron s works Charles J Clancy argues that Aurora Raby in Don Juan possesses many of the characteristics typical of a Byronic hero Described as silent lone in the poem her life has indeed been spent in isolation she has been orphaned from birth She validates Thorslev s assertion that Byronic heroes are invariably solitaries 32 Yet like her male counterpart she evokes an interest from those around her There was awe in the homage which she drew 33 Again this is not dissimilar to the description of the fascination that Byron himself encountered wherever he went 34 Her apparent mournful nature is also reminiscent of the regretful mien of the Byronic hero She is described as having deeply sad eyes Eyes which sadly shone as Seraphs shine 35 This was a specific characteristic of the Byronic hero 33 This seems to express a despair with humanity not unlike the despair present in Byron s Cain as Thorslev notes She herself admits to despairing at man s decline therefore this brings her into direct comparison with Cain s horror at the destruction of humanity 35 See also editAntihero List of fictional antiheroes Charisma Fatal flaw Tragic heroNotes edit The Literary Overview Heroes PDF Fox Valley Lutheran High School Christiansen 201 Sandgren Retta Aleen The Byronic hero in Childe Harold s pilgrimage the four Turkish tales Manfred and Don Juan Diss 2013 Poole 17 Christiansen 202 see Beaton Christiansen 202 213 Christiansen 201 203 Cairney Christopher 1995 The Villain Character in the Puritan World an Ideological Study of Richardson Radcliffe Byron and Arnold Columbia Missouri University of Missouri ProQuest 304205304 Alexandre Garner Corinne 2004 Borderlines and Borderlands Confluences XXIV Paris University of Paris X Nanterre pp 205 216 ISBN 2907335278 Byron George Gordon When I Roved a Young Highlander Wikisource Wikimedia Foundation Retrieved 21 November 2017 Wordsworth William Glen Almain or the Narrow Glen Wikisource Wikimedia Foundation Retrieved 21 November 2017 Wordsworth William 1807 Poems in Two Volumes London Longman Hurst Rees and Orme pp 16 17 Retrieved 21 November 2017 Cairney Chris 2018 Intertextuality and Intratextuality Does Mary Shelley Sit Heavily Behind Conrad s Heart of Darkness PDF Culture in Focus 1 1 105 Archived from the original PDF on 23 July 2018 Retrieved 30 April 2018 Christiansen 203 sections VIII XI of Canto I contain an extended account of Conrad s character see Wikisource text Thorslev Peter L The Byronic hero Types and prototypes Minneapolis University of Minnesota Press 1962 McCarthy 2002 p 555 McCarthy 2002 p 562 McCarthy 2002 p 564 Jones David Michael The Secret History of Romance Masculinity The Byronic Hero and the Novel 1814 1914 University of Connecticut 2012 Dumas 1844 p 247 McCarthy 2002 p 557 Harvey 1969 p 306 Harvey 1969 p 309 Harvey 1969 p 308 Christiansen 218 222 Christiansen 220 note Markos 2013 p 162 Amis 26 Johnson Megan Jeanine Recapturing the Byronic Hero Christopher Nolan s Batman Films Bachelor s thesis University of Arizona Tucson USA 2014 Dlask Jan Byronic Archetype in Star Wars Saga 2021 Clancy 1979 p 29 a b Clancy 1979 p 30 McCarthy 2002 p 161 a b Clancy 1979 p 31 References editAmis Kingsley The James Bond Dossier Jonathan Cape 1965 Christiansen Rupert Romantic Affinities Portraits From an Age 1780 1830 1989 Cardinal ISBN 0 7474 0404 6 Clancy Charles J 1979 Aurora Raby In Don Juan A Byronic Heroine Keats Shelley Journal New York Keats Shelley Association Of America 28 28 34 JSTOR 30212839 Dumas Alexandre 1844 The Count Of Monte Cristo Hertforshire Wordsworth Classics ISBN 978 1 85326 733 8 Harvey William R 1969 Charles Dickens And The Byronic Hero Nineteenth Century Fiction California University of California Press 24 3 305 316 doi 10 2307 2932860 JSTOR 2932860 McCarthy Fiona 2002 Byron Life And Legend London John Murray ISBN 0 7195 5621X Markos Louis 2013 Heaven And Hell Visions Of The Afterlife In Western Poetic Tradition Eugene Cascade ISBN 978 1 62032 750 0 Poole Gabriele The Byronic Hero Theatricality and Leadership The Byron Journal Volume 38 issue 1 2010 pp 7 18 doi 10 3828 bj 2010 4 Beaton Roderick Byron s War Cambridge Cambridge University Press 2013 Thorslev Peter L The Byronic Hero And Heroic Tradition The Byronic Hero Minnesota University Press 1962 External links editNorton topics online The Satanic and Byronic Hero Immortals and Vampires and Ghosts Oh My Byronic Heroes in Popular Culture Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Byronic hero amp oldid 1183258119, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.