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Lord Byron

George Gordon Byron, 6th Baron Byron FRS (22 January 1788 – 19 April 1824) was an English poet and peer.[1][2] He was one of the leading figures of the Romantic movement,[3][4][5] and is regarded as among the greatest of English poets.[6] Among his best-known works are the lengthy narratives Don Juan and Childe Harold's Pilgrimage; many of his shorter lyrics in Hebrew Melodies also became popular.


The Lord Byron

Portrait by Thomas Phillips, c. 1813
BornGeorge Gordon Byron
(1788-01-22)22 January 1788
London, England
Died19 April 1824(1824-04-19) (aged 36)
Missolonghi, Aetolia, Ottoman Empire (present-day Aetolia-Acarnania, Greece)
Resting placeChurch of St. Mary Magdalene, Hucknall, Nottinghamshire
OccupationPoet, politician
Alma materTrinity College, Cambridge
Spouse
(m. 1815; sep. 1816)
PartnerClaire Clairmont
Children
Parents
RelativesVice-Admiral The Hon. John Byron (grandfather)
Signature
In office
13 March 1809 – 19 April 1824
Hereditary peerage
Preceded byThe 5th Baron Byron
Succeeded byThe 7th Baron Byron

Byron was educated at Trinity College, Cambridge before travelling extensively across Europe to places such as Italy, where he lived for seven years in Venice, Ravenna, and Pisa after he was forced to flee England due to being threatened with lynching.[7] During his stay in Italy, he frequently visited his friend and fellow poet Percy Bysshe Shelley.[8] Later in life Byron joined the Greek War of Independence fighting the Ottoman Empire and died leading a campaign during that war, for which Greeks revere him as a folk hero.[9] He died in 1824 at the age of 36 from a fever contracted after the first and second sieges of Missolonghi.

His only legitimate child, Ada Lovelace, was a founding figure in the field of computer programming based on her notes for Charles Babbage's Analytical Engine.[10][11][12] Byron's extramarital children include Allegra Byron, who died in childhood, and possibly Elizabeth Medora Leigh, daughter of his half-sister Augusta Leigh.

Early life edit

 
An engraving of Byron's father, Captain John "Mad Jack" Byron, date unknown

George Gordon Byron was born on 22 January 1788, on Holles Street in London, England[1] – his birthplace is now supposedly occupied by a branch of the department store John Lewis.

Byron was the only child of Captain John Byron (known as 'Jack') and his second wife Catherine Gordon, heiress of the Gight estate in Aberdeenshire, Scotland. Byron's paternal grandparents were Vice-Admiral John Byron and Sophia Trevanion.[13] Having survived a shipwreck as a teenage midshipman, Vice Admiral John Byron set a new speed record for circumnavigating the globe. After he became embroiled in a tempestuous voyage during the American Revolutionary War, John was nicknamed 'Foul-Weather Jack' Byron by the press.[14]

Byron's father had previously been somewhat scandalously married to Amelia, Marchioness of Carmarthen, with whom he had been having an affair – the wedding took place just weeks after her divorce from her husband, and she was around eight months pregnant.[15] The marriage was not a happy one, and their first two children – Sophia Georgina, and an unnamed boy – died in infancy.[16] Amelia herself died in 1784 almost exactly a year after the birth of their third child, the poet's half-sister Augusta Mary.[17] Though Amelia died from a wasting illness, probably tuberculosis, the press reported that her heart had been broken out of remorse for leaving her husband. Much later, 19th-century sources blamed Jack's own "brutal and vicious" treatment of her.[18]

Jack then married Catherine Gordon of Gight on 13 May 1785, by all accounts only for her fortune.[19] To claim his second wife's estate in Scotland, Byron's father took the additional surname "Gordon", becoming "John Byron Gordon", and occasionally styled himself "John Byron Gordon of Gight". Byron's mother had to sell her land and title to pay her new husband's debts, and in the space of two years, the large estate, worth some £23,500, had been squandered, leaving the former heiress with an annual income in trust of only £150.[18] In a move to avoid his creditors, Catherine accompanied her profligate husband to France in 1786, but returned to England at the end of 1787 to give birth to her son.

The boy was born on 22 January in lodgings at Holles Street in London, and christened at St Marylebone Parish Church as "George Gordon Byron".[1] His father appears to have wished to call his son 'William', but as her husband remained absent, the young Byron's mother named him after her own father George Gordon of Gight,[20] who was a descendant of James I of Scotland, and who had died by suicide some four years earlier, in 1779.[21]

 
Catherine Gordon, Byron's mother, by Thomas Stewardson

Catherine moved back to Aberdeenshire in 1790, and Byron spent part of his childhood there.[21] His father soon joined them in their lodgings in Queen Street, but the couple quickly separated. Catherine regularly experienced mood swings and bouts of melancholy,[21] which could be partly explained by her husband's continuously borrowing money from her. As a result, she fell even further into debt to support his demands. One of these loans enabled him to travel to Valenciennes, France, where he died of a "long & suffering illness" – probably tuberculosis – in 1791.[22]

When Byron's great-uncle, who was posthumously labelled the "wicked" Lord Byron, died on 21 May 1798, the 10-year-old boy became the sixth Baron Byron of Rochdale and inherited the ancestral home, Newstead Abbey, in Nottinghamshire. His mother proudly took him to England, but the Abbey was in an embarrassing state of disrepair and, rather than live there, she decided to lease it to Lord Grey de Ruthyn, among others, during Byron's adolescence.[citation needed]

Described as "a woman without judgment or self-command", Catherine either spoiled and indulged her son or vexed him with her capricious stubbornness. Her drinking disgusted him and he often mocked her for being short and corpulent, which made it difficult for her to catch him to discipline him. Byron had been born with a deformed right foot; his mother once retaliated and, in a fit of temper, referred to him as "a lame brat".[23] However, Byron's biographer, Doris Langley Moore, in her 1974 book Accounts Rendered, paints a more sympathetic view of Mrs Byron, showing how she was a staunch supporter of her son and sacrificed her own precarious finances to keep him in luxury at Harrow and Cambridge. Langley-Moore questions 19th-century biographer John Galt's claim that she over-indulged in alcohol.[24]

Byron's mother-in-law Judith Noel, the Hon. Lady Milbanke, died in 1822, and her will required that he change his surname to "Noel" in order to inherit half of her estate. He accordingly obtained a Royal Warrant, enabling him to "take and use the surname of Noel only" and to "subscribe the said surname of Noel before all titles of honour". From that point, he signed himself "Noel Byron" (the usual signature of a peer being merely the name of the peerage, in this case simply "Byron"). Some have speculated that he did this so that his initials would read "N.B.", mimicking those of his hero, Napoleon Bonaparte. Lady Byron eventually succeeded to the Barony of Wentworth, becoming "Lady Wentworth".[25]

Education edit

Byron received his early formal education at Aberdeen Grammar School in 1798 until his move back to England as a 10-year-old. In August 1799 he entered the school of Dr. William Glennie, in Dulwich.[26] Placed under the care of a Dr. Bailey, he was encouraged to exercise in moderation but could not restrain himself from "violent" bouts of activity in an attempt to compensate for his deformed foot. His mother interfered with his studies, often withdrawing him from school, which arguably contributed to his lack of self-discipline and his neglect of his classical studies.

In 1801, he was sent to Harrow School, where he remained until July 1805.[27][21] An undistinguished student and an unskilled cricketer, he nevertheless represented the school during the very first Eton v Harrow cricket match at Lord's in 1805.[28]

His lack of moderation was not restricted to physical exercise. Byron fell in love with Mary Chaworth, whom he met while at school,[21] and she was the reason he refused to return to Harrow in September 1803. His mother wrote, "He has no indisposition that I know of but love, desperate love, the worst of all maladies in my opinion. In short, the boy is distractedly in love with Miss Chaworth."[21] In Byron's later memoirs, "Mary Chaworth is portrayed as the first object of his adult sexual feelings."[29]

 
John FitzGibbon, 2nd Earl of Clare

Byron finally returned in January 1804,[21] to a more settled period, which saw the formation of a circle of emotional involvements with other Harrow boys, which he recalled with great vividness: "My school friendships were with me passions (for I was always violent)".[30] The most enduring of those was with John FitzGibbon, 2nd Earl of Clare—four years Byron's junior—whom he was to meet again unexpectedly many years later, in 1821, in Italy.[31] His nostalgic poems about his Harrow friendships, Childish Recollections (1806), express a prescient "consciousness of sexual differences that may in the end make England untenable to him."[32] Letters to Byron in the John Murray archive contain evidence of a previously unremarked if short-lived romantic relationship with a younger boy at Harrow, John Thomas Claridge.[33]

The following autumn, he entered Trinity College, Cambridge,[34] where he met and formed a close friendship with the younger John Edleston. About his "protégé" he wrote, "He has been my almost constant associate since October, 1805, when I entered Trinity College. His voice first attracted my attention, his countenance fixed it, and his manners attached me to him for ever." After Edleston's death, Byron composed Thyrza, a series of elegies, in his memory.[35] In later years, he described the affair as "a violent, though pure love and passion". This statement, however, needs to be read in the context of hardening public attitudes toward homosexuality in England and the severe sanctions (including public hanging) imposed upon convicted or even suspected offenders.[36] The liaison, on the other hand, may well have been "pure" out of respect for Edleston's innocence, in contrast to the (probably) more sexually overt relations experienced at Harrow School.[37] The poem "The Cornelian" was written about the cornelian that Byron had received from Edleston.[38]

Byron spent three years at Trinity College, engaging in sexual escapades, boxing, horse riding, and gambling. While at Cambridge, he also formed lifelong friendships with men such as John Cam Hobhouse, who initiated him into the Cambridge Whig Club, which endorsed liberal politics, and Francis Hodgson, a Fellow at King's College, with whom he corresponded on literary and other matters until the end of his life.[39]

Career edit

Early career edit

 
Byron's house, Burgage Manor, in Southwell, Nottinghamshire

While not at school or college, Byron lived at his mother's residence, Burgage Manor in Southwell, Nottinghamshire.[21] While there, he cultivated friendships with Elizabeth Bridget Pigot and her brother John, with whom he staged two plays for the entertainment of the community. During this time, with the help of Elizabeth Pigot, who copied many of his rough drafts, he was encouraged to write his first volumes of poetry. Fugitive Pieces was printed by Ridge of Newark, which contained poems written when Byron was only 17.[40] However, it was promptly recalled and burned on the advice of his friend the Reverend J. T. Becher, on account of its more amorous verses, particularly the poem To Mary.[41]

Hours of Idleness, a collection of many of the previous poems, along with more recent compositions, was the culminating book. The savage, anonymous criticism it received (now known to be the work of Henry Peter Brougham) in the Edinburgh Review prompted Byron to compose his first major satire,[42] English Bards and Scotch Reviewers (1809).[27] Byron put it into the hands of his relative R. C. Dallas, and asked him to "...get it published without his name."[43] Alexander Dallas suggested a large number of changes to the manuscript, and provided the reasoning for some of them. Dallas also stated that Byron had originally intended to prefix an argument to this poem, which Dallas quoted.[44] Although it was published anonymously, that April R. C. Dallas wrote that "you are already pretty generally known to be the author".[45] The work so upset some of his critics that they challenged Byron to a duel; over time, in subsequent editions, it became a mark of prestige to be the target of Byron's pen.[42]

 
Autograph letter signed to John Hanson, Byron's lawyer and business agent. Fondazione BEIC

After his return from travels he entrusted R. C. Dallas, as his literary agent, with the publication of his poem Childe Harold's Pilgrimage, which Byron thought to be of little account. The first two cantos of Childe Harold's Pilgrimage were published in 1812 and were received with critical acclaim.[46][47] In Byron's own words, "I awoke one morning and found myself famous."[48] He followed up this success with the poem's last two cantos, as well as four equally celebrated "Oriental Tales": The Giaour, The Bride of Abydos, The Corsair, and Lara. About the same time, he began his intimacy with his future biographer, Thomas Moore.[27]

First travels to the East edit

 
Byron's Stone in Tepelenë, Albania
 
Teresa Makri in 1870

Byron racked up numerous debts as a young man, owing to what his mother termed a "reckless disregard for money".[21] She lived at Newstead during this time, in fear of her son's creditors.[21] He had planned to spend some time in 1808 cruising with his cousin George Bettesworth, who was captain of the 32-gun frigate HMS Tartar, but Bettesworth's death at the Battle of Alvøen in May 1808 made that impossible.

From 1809 to 1811,[49] Byron went on the Grand Tour, then a customary part of the education of young noblemen. He travelled with Hobhouse for the first year, and his entourage of servants included Byron's trustworthy valet, William Fletcher. Hobhouse and Byron often made Fletcher the butt of their humour. The Napoleonic Wars forced Byron to avoid touring in most of Europe; he instead turned to the Mediterranean. His journey enabled him to avoid his creditors and to meet up with a former love, Mary Chaworth (the subject of his poem "To a Lady: On Being Asked My Reason for Quitting England in the Spring").[42] Letters to Byron from his friend Charles Skinner Matthews reveal that a key motive was also the hope of homosexual experiences.[50] Another reason for choosing to visit the Mediterranean was probably his curiosity about the Levant; he had read about the Ottoman and Persian lands as a child, was attracted to Islam (especially Sufi mysticism), and later wrote, "With these countries, and events connected with them, all my really poetical feelings begin and end."[51][52]

Byron began his trip in Portugal, from where he wrote a letter to his friend Mr Hodgson in which he describes what he had learned of the Portuguese language: mainly swear words and insults. Byron particularly enjoyed his stay in Sintra, which he later described in Childe Harold's Pilgrimage as "glorious Eden". From Lisbon he travelled overland to Seville, Jerez de la Frontera, Cádiz, and Gibraltar, and from there by sea to Sardinia, Malta, Albania and Greece.[53][54] The purpose of Byron's and Hobhouse's travel to Albania was to meet Ali Pasha of Ioannina and to see the country that was, until then, mostly unknown in Britain.[54]

While in Athens, Byron met 14-year-old Nicolo Giraud, with whom he became intimate,[55][56] and who taught him Italian. Byron arranged to have Giraud enrolled in school at a monastery in Malta, and wrote him into his will, with a bequest of £7,000. (That will, however, was later cancelled.)[57] Byron wrote to Hobhouse from Athens, "I am tired of pl & opt Cs, the last thing I could be tired of." Opt Cs refers to a quote from Petronius' Satyricon, "coitum plenum et optabilem," "complete intercourse to one's heart's desire," their shared code for homosexual experiences.[58]

In Athens in 1810, Byron wrote "Maid of Athens, ere we part" for a 12-year-old girl, Teresa Makri (1798–1875).

Byron and Hobhouse made their way to Smyrna, where they cadged a ride to Constantinople on HMS Salsette. On 3 May 1810, while Salsette was anchored awaiting Ottoman permission to dock at the city, Byron and Lieutenant Ekenhead, of Salsette's Marines, swam the Hellespont. Byron commemorated this feat in the second canto of Don Juan. He returned to England from Malta in July 1811 aboard HMS Volage.[59]

England 1811–1816 edit

 
Portrait of Byron by Richard Westall

After the publication of the first two cantos of Childe Harold's Pilgrimage (1812), Byron became a celebrity. "He rapidly became the most brilliant star in the dazzling world of Regency London. He was sought after at every society venue, elected to several exclusive clubs, and frequented the most fashionable London drawing-rooms."[26] During this period in England he produced many works, including The Giaour, The Bride of Abydos (1813), Parisina, and The Siege of Corinth (1815). On the initiative of the composer Isaac Nathan, he produced in 1814–1815 the Hebrew Melodies (including what became some of his best-known lyrics, such as "She Walks in Beauty" and "The Destruction of Sennacherib"). Involved at first in an affair with Lady Caroline Lamb (who called him "mad, bad and dangerous to know") and with other lovers and also pressed by debt, he began to seek a suitable marriage, considering – amongst others – Annabella Millbanke.[60] However, in 1813 he met for the first time in four years his half-sister, Augusta Leigh. Rumours of incest surrounded the pair; Augusta's daughter Medora (b. 1814) was suspected to have been Byron's child. To escape from growing debts and rumours, Byron pressed in his determination to marry Annabella, who was said to be the likely heiress of a rich uncle. They married on 2 January 1815, and their daughter, Ada, was born in December of that year. However, Byron's continuing obsession with Augusta Leigh (and his continuing sexual escapades with actresses such as Charlotte Mardyn[61][62] and others) made their marital life a misery. Annabella considered Byron insane, and in January 1816 she left him, taking their daughter, and began proceedings for a legal separation. Their separation was made legal in a private settlement in March 1816. The scandal of the separation, the rumours about Augusta, and ever-increasing debts forced him to leave England in April 1816, never to return.[26]

Life abroad (1816–1824) edit

Switzerland and the Shelleys edit

After this break-up of his domestic life, and by pressure on the part of his creditors, which led to the sale of his library, Byron left England,[27] and never returned. (Despite his dying wishes, however, his body was returned for burial in England.) He journeyed through Belgium and continued up the Rhine river. In the summer of 1816 he settled at the Villa Diodati by Lake Geneva, Switzerland, with his personal physician, John William Polidori. There Byron befriended the poet Percy Bysshe Shelley and Shelley's future wife, Mary Godwin. He was also joined by Mary's stepsister, Claire Clairmont, with whom he'd had an affair in London, which subsequently resulted in the birth of their illegitimate child Allegra, who died at the age of 5 under the care of Byron later in life.[63] Several times Byron went to see Germaine de Staël and her Coppet group, which turned out to be a valid intellectual and emotional support to Byron at the time.[64]

 
Frontispiece to a c. 1825 edition of Childe Harold's Pilgrimage

Kept indoors at the Villa Diodati by the "incessant rain" of "that wet, ungenial summer" over three days in June, the five turned to reading fantastical stories, including Fantasmagoriana, and then devising their own tales. Mary Shelley produced what would become Frankenstein, or The Modern Prometheus, and Polidori produced The Vampyre,[65] the progenitor of the Romantic vampire genre.[66][67] The Vampyre was the inspiration for a fragmentary story of Byron's, "A Fragment".[68]

Byron's story fragment was published as a postscript to Mazeppa; he also wrote the third canto of Childe Harold.

Italy edit

Byron wintered in Venice, pausing in his travels when he fell in love with Marianna Segati, in whose Venice house he was lodging, and who was soon replaced by 22-year-old Margarita Cogni; both women were married. Cogni could not read or write, and she left her husband to move in with Byron. Their fighting often caused Byron to spend the night in his gondola; when he asked her to leave the house, she threw herself into the Venetian canal.[69]

 
Byron's visit to San Lazzaro degli Armeni as depicted in Ivan Aivazovsky's 1899 portrait

In 1816, Byron visited San Lazzaro degli Armeni in Venice, where he acquainted himself with Armenian culture with the help of the monks belonging to the Mechitarist Order. With the help of Father Pascal Aucher (Harutiun Avkerian), he learned the Armenian language[69][70] and attended many seminars about language and history. He co-authored Grammar English and Armenian in 1817, an English textbook written by Aucher and corrected by Byron, and A Grammar Armenian and English in 1819, a project he initiated of a grammar of Classical Armenian for English speakers, where he included quotations from classical and modern Armenian.[69]

Byron later helped to compile the English Armenian Dictionary (Barraran angleren yev hayeren, 1821) and wrote the preface, in which he explained Armenian oppression by the Turkish pashas and the Persian satraps and the Armenian struggle of liberation. His two main translations are the Epistle of Paul to the Corinthians, two chapters of Movses Khorenatsi's History of Armenia, and sections of Nerses of Lambron's Orations.[71]

His fascination was so great that he even considered a replacement of the Cain story of the Bible with that of the legend of the Armenian patriarch Haik. He may be credited with the birth of Armenology and its propagation. His profound lyricism and ideological courage have inspired many Armenian poets, the likes of Ghevond Alishan, Smbat Shahaziz, Hovhannes Tumanyan, Ruben Vorberian, and others.[71]

In 1817, he journeyed to Rome. On returning to Venice, he wrote the fourth canto of Childe Harold. About the same time, he sold Newstead Abbey and published Manfred, Cain, and The Deformed Transformed. The first five cantos of Don Juan were written between 1818 and 1820.[27] During this period he met the 21-year-old Countess Guiccioli, who found her first love in Byron; he asked her to elope with him.[27][69][72] After considering migrating to Venezuela or to the Cape Colony,[73] Byron finally decided to leave Venice for Ravenna.

Because of his love for the local aristocratic, young, newly married Teresa Guiccioli, Byron lived in Ravenna from 1819 to 1821. Here he continued Don Juan and wrote the Ravenna Diary and My Dictionary and Recollections. Around this time he received visits from Percy Bysshe Shelley, as well as from Thomas Moore, to whom he confided his autobiography or "life and adventures", which Moore, Hobhouse, and Byron's publisher, John Murray,[69] burned in 1824, a month after Byron's death.[46] Of Byron's lifestyle in Ravenna we know more from Shelley, who documented some of its more colourful aspects in a letter: "Lord Byron gets up at two. I get up, quite contrary to my usual custom ... at 12. After breakfast we sit talking till six. From six to eight we gallop through the pine forest which divide Ravenna from the sea; we then come home and dine, and sit up gossiping till six in the morning. I don't suppose this will kill me in a week or fortnight, but I shall not try it longer. Lord B.'s establishment consists, besides servants, of ten horses, eight enormous dogs, three monkeys, five cats, an eagle, a crow, and a falcon; and all these, except the horses, walk about the house, which every now and then resounds with their unarbitrated quarrels, as if they were the masters of it... . [P.S.] I find that my enumeration of the animals in this Circean Palace was defective ... . I have just met on the grand staircase five peacocks, two guinea hens, and an Egyptian crane. I wonder who all these animals were before they were changed into these shapes."[74]

 
"Byron's Grotto" in Porto Venere, Italy, named in Byron's honour because, according to local legend, he meditated here and drew inspiration from this place for his literary works
 
Α 19th-century sculptural composition by Henri-Michel Chapu and Alexandre Falguière depicting Greece in the form of a female figure crowning Lord Byron in the National Park in Athens (Άγαλμα Λόρδου Βύρωνος)

In 1821, Byron left Ravenna and went to live in the Tuscan city of Pisa, to which Teresa had also relocated. From 1821 to 1822, Byron finished Cantos 6–12 of Don Juan at Pisa, and in the same year he joined with Leigh Hunt and Shelley in starting a short-lived newspaper, The Liberal, in whose first number The Vision of Judgment appeared.[27] For the first time since his arrival in Italy, Byron found himself tempted to give dinner parties; his guests included the Shelleys, Edward Ellerker Williams, Thomas Medwin, John Taaffe, and Edward John Trelawny; and "never", as Shelley said, "did he display himself to more advantage than on these occasions; being at once polite and cordial, full of social hilarity and the most perfect good humour; never diverging into ungraceful merriment, and yet keeping up the spirit of liveliness throughout the evening."[75]

Shelley and Williams rented a house on the coast and had a schooner built. Byron decided to have his own yacht, and engaged Trelawny's friend, Captain Daniel Roberts, to design and construct the boat. Named the Bolivar, it was later sold to Charles John Gardiner, 1st Earl of Blessington, and Marguerite, Countess of Blessington, when Byron left for Greece in 1823.[76][77]

Byron attended the beachside cremation of Shelley, which was orchestrated by Trelawny after Williams and Shelley drowned in a boating accident on 8 July 1822.[78] His last Italian home was in Genoa.[79] While living there he was accompanied by the Countess Guiccioli,[79] and the Blessingtons. Lady Blessington based much of the material in her book, Conversations with Lord Byron, on the time spent together there.[80] This book became an important biographical text about Byron's life just prior to his death.

Ottoman Greece edit

 
Lord Byron in Albanian dress by Thomas Phillips, 1813. Venizelos Mansion, Athens (the British Ambassador's residence).

Byron was living in Genoa in 1823, when, growing bored with his life there, he accepted overtures for his support from representatives of the Greek independence movement from the Ottoman Empire.[81] At first, Byron did not wish to leave his 22-year-old mistress, Countess Teresa Guiccioli, who had abandoned her husband to live with him. But ultimately Guiccioli's father, Count Gamba, was allowed to leave his exile in the Romagna under the condition that his daughter return to him, without Byron.[82] At the same time that the philhellene, Edward Blaquiere, was attempting to recruit him, Byron was confused as to what he was supposed to do in Greece, writing: "Blaquiere seemed to think that I might be of some use-even here;—though what he did not exactly specify".[82] With the assistance of his banker and Captain Daniel Roberts, Byron chartered the brig Hercules to take him to Greece. When Byron left Genoa, it caused "passionate grief" from Guiccioli, who wept openly as he sailed away. The Hercules was forced to return to port shortly afterwards. When it set sail for the final time, Guiccioli had already left Genoa.[83] On 16 July, Byron left Genoa, arriving at Kefalonia in the Ionian Islands on 4 August.

His voyage is covered in detail in Donald Prell's Sailing with Byron from Genoa to Cephalonia.[84] Prell also wrote of a coincidence in Byron's chartering the Hercules. The vessel was launched only a few miles south of Seaham Hall, where in 1815 Byron married Annabella Milbanke. Between 1815 and 1823 the vessel was in service between England and Canada. Suddenly in 1823, the ship's Captain decided to sail to Genoa and offer the Hercules for charter. After taking Byron to Greece, the ship returned to England, never again to venture into the Mediterranean. The Hercules was aged 37 when, on 21 September 1852, she went aground near Hartlepool, 25 miles south of Sunderland, the place where her keel had been laid in 1815. Byron's "keel was laid" nine months before his official birth date, 22 January 1788. Therefore in ship years, he was also 37 when he died in Missolonghi.[85]

Byron initially stayed on the island of Kefalonia, where he was besieged by agents of the rival Greek factions, all of whom wanted to recruit Byron for their own cause.[86] The Ionian islands, of which Kefalonia is one, were under British rule until 1864. Byron spent £4,000 of his own money to refit the Greek fleet.[87] When Byron travelled to the mainland of Greece on the night of 28 December 1823, Byron's ship was surprised by an Ottoman warship, which did not attack his ship, as the Ottoman captain mistook Byron's boat for a fireship. To avoid the Ottoman Navy, which he encountered several times on his voyage, Byron was forced to take a roundabout route and only reached Missolonghi on 5 January 1824.[88]

After arriving in Missolonghi, Byron joined forces with Alexandros Mavrokordatos, a Greek politician with military power. Byron moved to the second floor of a two-story house and was forced to spend much of his time dealing with unruly Souliotes who demanded that Byron pay them the back-pay owed to them by the Greek government.[89] Byron gave the Souliotes some £6,000.[90] Byron was supposed to lead an attack on the Ottoman fortress of Navpaktos, whose Albanian garrison were unhappy due to arrears in pay, and who offered to put up only token resistance if Byron was willing to bribe them into surrendering. However, Ottoman commander Yussuf Pasha executed the mutinous Albanian officers who were offering to surrender Navpaktos to Byron and arranged to have some of the arrears paid out to the rest of the garrison.[91] Byron never led the attack on Navpaktos because the Souliotes kept demanding that Byron pay them more and more money before they would march; Byron grew tired of their blackmail and sent them all home on 15 February 1824.[91] Byron wrote in a note to himself: "Having tried in vain at every expense, considerable trouble—and some danger to unite the Suliotes for the good of Greece-and their own—I have come to the following resolution—I will have nothing more to do with the Suliotes-they may go to the Turks or the devil...they may cut me into more pieces than they have dissensions among them, sooner than change my resolution".[91] At the same time, Guiccioli's brother, Pietro Gamba, who had followed Byron to Greece, exasperated Byron with his incompetence as he continually made expensive mistakes. For example, when asked to buy some cloth from Corfu, Gamba ordered the wrong cloth in excess, causing the bill to be 10 times higher than what Byron wanted.[92] Byron wrote about his right-hand man: "Gamba—who is anything but lucky—had something to do with it—and as usual—the moment he had—matters went wrong".[90]

 
The reception of Lord Byron at Missolonghi

To help raise money for the revolution, Byron sold his estate in England, Rochdale Manor, which raised some £11,250. This led Byron to estimate that he now had some £20,000 at his disposal, all of which he planned to spend on the Greek cause.[93] In today's money Byron would have been a millionaire many times over. News that a fabulously wealthy British aristocrat, known for his financial generosity, had arrived in Greece made Byron the object of much solicitation in that desperately poor country.[93] Byron wrote to his business agent in England, "I should not like to give the Greeks but a half helping hand", saying he would have wanted to spend his entire fortune on Greek freedom.[93] Byron found himself besieged by various people, both Greek and foreign, who tried to persuade him to open his pocketbook for support. By the end of March 1824, the so-called "Byron brigade" of 30 philhellene officers and about 200 men had been formed, paid for entirely by Byron.[94] Leadership of the Greek cause in the Roumeli region was divided between two rival leaders: a former Klepht (bandit), Odysseas Androutsos; and a wealthy Phanariot Prince, Alexandros Mavrokordatos. Byron used his prestige to attempt to persuade the two rival leaders to come together to focus on defeating the Ottomans.[95] At the same time, other leaders of the Greek factions like Petrobey Mavromichalis and Theodoros Kolokotronis wrote letters to Byron telling him to disregard all of the Roumeliot leaders and to come to their respective areas in the Peloponnese. This drove Byron to distraction; he complained that the Greeks were hopelessly disunited and spent more time feuding with each other than trying to win independence.[96] Byron's friend Edward John Trelawny had aligned himself with Androutsos, who ruled Athens, and was now pressing for Byron to break with Mavrokordatos in favour of backing the rival Androutsos.[94] Androutsos, having won over Trelawny to his cause, was now anxious to persuade Byron to put his wealth behind his claim to be the leader of Greece.[97] Byron wrote with disgust about how one of the Greek captains, former Klepht Georgios Karaiskakis, attacked Missolonghi on 3 April 1824 with some 150 men supported by the Souliotes as he was unhappy with Mavrokordatos's leadership, which led to a brief bout of inter-Greek fighting before Karaiskakis was chased away by April 6.[98]

Byron adopted a nine-year-old Turkish Muslim girl called Hato, whose parents had been killed by the Greeks. He ultimately sent her to safety in Kefalonia, knowing well that religious hatred between the Orthodox Greeks and Muslim Turks was running high and that any Muslim in Greece, even a child, was in serious danger.[99] Until 1934, most Turks did not have surnames; Hato's lack of a surname was quite typical for a Turkish family at this time.

Byron pursued his Greek page, Lukas Chalandritsanos, with whom he had fallen madly in love, but the affections went unrequited.[46][99] Byron spoiled the teenage Chalandritsanos outrageously, spending some £600 (the equivalent of about £24,600 in today's money) catering to his every whim over the course of 6 months and writing his last poems about his passion for the Greek boy. Chalandritsanos was only interested in Byron's money.[99] When the famous Danish sculptor Bertel Thorvaldsen heard about Byron's heroics in Greece, he voluntarily resculpted his earlier bust of Byron in Greek marble.[69]

Death edit

 
Lord Byron on His Deathbed, by Joseph Denis Odevaere (c. 1826). The sheet covers Byron's misshapen right foot.

Mavrokordatos and Byron planned to attack the Turkish-held fortress of Lepanto, at the mouth of the Gulf of Corinth. Byron employed a fire master to prepare artillery, and he took part of the rebel army under his own command despite his lack of military experience. Before the expedition could sail, on February 15, 1824, he fell ill, and bloodletting weakened him further.[100] He made a partial recovery, but in early April he caught a violent cold; the therapeutic bleeding insisted on by his doctors exacerbated it. He contracted a violent fever and died in Missolonghi on 19 April.[100]

His physician at the time, Julius van Millingen, son of Dutch–English archaeologist James Millingen, was unable to prevent his death. It has been said that if Byron had lived and had gone on to defeat the Ottomans, he might have been declared King of Greece. However, modern scholars have found such an outcome unlikely.[46] The British historian David Brewer wrote that in one sense, Byron failed to persuade the rival Greek factions to unite, won no victories and was successful only in the humanitarian sphere, using his great wealth to help the victims of the war, Christian and Muslim, but this did not affect the outcome of the Greek war of independence.[101]

Brewer went on to argue,

In another sense, though, Byron achieved everything he could have wished. His presence in Greece, and in particular his death there, drew to the Greek cause not just the attention of sympathetic nations, but their increasing active participation ... Despite the critics, Byron is primarily remembered with admiration as a poet of genius, with something approaching veneration as a symbol of high ideals, and with great affection as a man: for his courage and his ironic slant on life, for his generosity to the grandest of causes and to the humblest of individuals, for the constant interplay of judgment and sympathy. In Greece, he is still revered as no other foreigner, and as very few Greeks are, and like a Homeric hero he is accorded an honorific standard epithet, megalos kai kalos, a great and good man.[102]

Post mortem edit

 
A Narrative of Lord Byron's Last Journey to Greece by Pietro Gamba (1825)

Alfred Tennyson would later recall the shocked reaction in Britain when word was received of Byron's death.[46] The Greeks mourned Lord Byron deeply, and he became a hero.[103][104] The national poet of Greece, Dionysios Solomos, wrote a poem about the unexpected loss, named To the Death of Lord Byron.[105] Βύρων, the Greek form of "Byron", continues in popularity as a masculine name in Greece, and a suburb of Athens is called Vyronas in his honour.

Byron's body was embalmed, but the Greeks wanted some part of their hero to stay with them. According to some sources, his heart remained at Missolonghi.[106] His other remains were sent to England (accompanied by his faithful manservant, "Tita") for burial in Westminster Abbey, but the Abbey refused for reason of "questionable morality".[46][107] Huge crowds viewed his coffin as he lay in state for two days at number 25 Great George Street, Westminster.[108][46] He is buried at the Church of St. Mary Magdalene in Hucknall, Nottinghamshire.[109] A marble slab given by the King of Greece is laid directly above Byron's grave. His daughter Ada Lovelace was later buried beside him.[110]

Byron's friends raised £1,000 to commission a statue of the writer; Thorvaldsen offered to sculpt it for that amount.[69] However, after the statue was completed in 1834, for ten years, British institutions turned it down and it remained in storage. It was refused by the British Museum, St. Paul's Cathedral, Westminster Abbey and the National Gallery[69] before Trinity College, Cambridge finally placed the statue of Byron in its library.[69]

In 1969, 145 years after Byron's death, a memorial to him was finally placed in Westminster Abbey.[111][112] The memorial had been lobbied for As of 1907: The New York Times wrote, "People are beginning to ask whether this ignoring of Byron is not a thing of which England should be ashamed ... a bust or a tablet might be put in the Poets' Corner and England be relieved of ingratitude toward one of her really great sons."[113]

Robert Ripley had drawn a picture of Boatswain's grave with the caption "Lord Byron's dog has a magnificent tomb while Lord Byron himself has none". This came as a shock to the English, particularly schoolchildren, who, Ripley said, raised funds of their own accord to provide the poet with a suitable memorial.[114]

Close to the centre of Athens, Greece, outside the National Garden, is a statue depicting Greece in the form of a woman crowning Byron. The statue is by the French sculptors Henri-Michel Chapu and Alexandre Falguière. As of 2008, the anniversary of Byron's death, 19 April, has been honoured in Greece as "Byron Day".[115]

Upon his death, the barony passed to Byron's cousin George Anson Byron, a career naval officer.

Personal life edit

Relationships and scandals edit

Byron described his first intense feelings at the age of seven for his distant cousin Mary Duff:

My mother used always to rally me about this childish amour, and at last, many years after, when I was sixteen, she told me one day, 'O Byron, I have had a letter from Edinburgh, and your old sweetheart, Mary Duff, is married to Mr. C***.' And what was my answer? I really cannot explain or account for my feelings at that moment, but they nearly threw me into convulsions... How the deuce did all this occur so early? Where could it originate? I certainly had no sexual ideas for years afterwards; and yet my misery, my love for that girl were so violent, that I sometimes doubt if I have ever been really attached since. Be that as it may, hearing of her marriage several years after was like a thunder-stroke – it nearly choked me – to the horror of my mother and the astonishment and almost incredulity of every body. And it is a phenomenon in my existence (for I was not eight years old) which has puzzled, and will puzzle me to the latest hour of it; and lately, I know not why, the recollection (not the attachment) has recurred as forcibly as ever...But, the more I reflect, the more I am bewildered to assign any cause for this precocity of affection.[116]

Byron also became attached to Margaret Parker, another distant cousin.[42] While his recollection of his love for Mary Duff is that he was ignorant of adult sexuality during this time and was bewildered as to the source of the intensity of his feelings, he would later confess that:

My passions were developed very early – so early, that few would believe me – if I were to state the period – and the facts which accompanied it. Perhaps this was one of the reasons that caused the anticipated melancholy of my thoughts – having anticipated life.[117]

This is the only reference Byron himself makes to the event, and he is ambiguous as to how old he was when it occurred. After his death, his lawyer wrote to a mutual friend telling him a "singular fact" about Byron's life which was "scarcely fit for narration". But he disclosed it nonetheless, thinking it might explain Byron's sexual "propensities":

When nine years old at his mother's house a Free Scotch girl [May – sometimes called Mary – Gray, one of his first caretakers] used to come to bed to him and play tricks with his person.[118]

Gray later used this knowledge as a means of ensuring his silence if he were to be tempted to disclose the "low company" she kept during drinking binges.[119] She was later dismissed, supposedly for beating Byron when he was 11.[42]

A few years later, while he was still a child, Lord Grey De Ruthyn (unrelated to May Gray), a suitor of his mother's, also made sexual advances on him.[120] Byron's personality has been characterised as exceptionally proud and sensitive, especially when it came to his foot deformity.[18] His extreme reaction to seeing his mother flirting outrageously with Lord Grey De Ruthyn after the incident suggests he did not tell her of Grey's conduct toward him; he simply refused to speak to him again and ignored his mother's commands to be reconciled.[120] Leslie A. Marchand, one of Byron's biographers, theorises that Lord Grey De Ruthyn's advances prompted Byron's later sexual liaisons with young men at Harrow and Cambridge.[46]

Scholars acknowledge a more or less important bisexual component in Byron's very complex sentimental and sexual life. Bernhard Jackson asserts that "Byron's sexual orientation has long been a difficult, not to say contentious, topic, and anyone who seeks to discuss it must to some degree speculate since the evidence is nebulous, contradictory and scanty... it is not so simple to define Byron as homosexual or heterosexual: he seems rather to have been both, and either."[121][122] Crompton states: "What was not understood in Byron's own century (except by a tiny circle of his associates) was that Byron was bisexual".[123] Another biographer, Fiona MacCarthy, has posited that Byron's true sexual yearnings were for adolescent males.[46] Byron used a code by which he communicated his homosexual Greek adventures to John Hobhouse in England: Bernhard Jackson recalls that "Byron's early code for sex with a boy" was "Plen(um). and optabil(em). -Coit(um)"[121] Bullough summarises:

Byron, was attached to Nicolo Giraud, a young French-Greek lad who had been a model for the painter Lusieri before Byron found him. Byron left him £7,000 in his will. When Byron returned to Italy, he became involved with a number of boys in Venice but eventually settled on Loukas Chalandritsanos, age 15, who was with him when he was killed [sic][124] (Crompton, 1985).

— Bullough (1990), p. 72

In 1812, Byron embarked on a well-publicised affair with the married Lady Caroline Lamb that shocked the British public.[125] She had spurned the attention of the poet on their first meeting, subsequently giving Byron what became his lasting epitaph when she famously described him as "mad, bad and dangerous to know".[126] This did not prevent her from pursuing him.[127][126] Byron eventually broke off the relationship and moved swiftly on to others (such as Lady Oxford), but Lamb never entirely recovered, pursuing him even after he tired of her. She was emotionally disturbed and lost so much weight that Byron sarcastically commented to her mother-in-law, his friend Lady Melbourne, that he was "haunted by a skeleton".[128] She began to stalk him, calling on him at home, sometimes dressed in disguise as a pageboy,[125] at a time when such an act could ruin both of them socially. Once, during such a visit, she wrote on a book at his desk, "Remember me!" As a retort, Byron wrote a poem entitled Remember Thee! Remember Thee! which concludes with the line "Thou false to him, thou fiend to me".

As a child, Byron had seen little of his half-sister Augusta Leigh; in adulthood, he formed a close relationship with her that has been interpreted by some as incestuous,[128] and by others as innocent.[42] Augusta (who was married) gave birth on 15 April 1814 to her third daughter, Elizabeth Medora Leigh, rumoured by some to be Byron's.

Eventually, Byron began to court Lady Caroline's cousin Anne Isabella Milbanke ("Annabella"), who refused his first proposal of marriage but later accepted him. Milbanke was a highly moral woman, intelligent and mathematically gifted; she was also an heiress. They married at Seaham Hall, County Durham, on 2 January 1815.[128] The marriage proved unhappy. They had a daughter, Augusta Ada. On 16 January 1816, Lady Byron left him, taking Ada with her. That same year on 21 April, Byron signed the Deed of Separation. Rumours of marital violence, adultery with actresses, incest with Augusta Leigh, and sodomy were circulated, assisted by a jealous Lady Caroline.[128] In a letter, Augusta quoted him as saying: "Even to have such a thing said is utter destruction and ruin to a man from which he can never recover." That same year Lady Caroline published her popular novel Glenarvon, in which Lord Byron was portrayed as the seedy title character.[129]

Children edit

Byron wrote a letter to John Hanson from Newstead Abbey, dated 17 January 1809, that includes "You will discharge my Cook, & Laundry Maid, the other two I shall retain to take care of the house, more especially as the youngest is pregnant (I need not tell you by whom) and I cannot have the girl on the parish."[130] His reference to "The youngest" is understood to have been to a maid, Lucy, and the parenthesised remark to indicate himself as siring a son born that year. In 2010 part of a baptismal record was uncovered which apparently said: "September 24 George illegitimate son of Lucy Monk, illegitimate son of Baron Byron, of Newstead, Nottingham, Newstead Abbey."[131]

Augusta Leigh's child, Elizabeth Medora Leigh, born in 1814, was possibly fathered by Byron, who was Augusta's half-brother.

Byron had a child, The Hon. Augusta Ada Byron ("Ada", later Countess of Lovelace), in 1815, by his wife Annabella Byron, Lady Byron (née Anne Isabella Milbanke, or "Annabella"), later Lady Wentworth. Ada Lovelace, notable in her own right, collaborated with Charles Babbage on the analytical engine, a predecessor to modern computers. She is recognised[132] as one of[133] the world's first computer programmers.

He also had an extramarital child in 1817, Clara Allegra Byron, with Claire Clairmont, stepsister of Mary Shelley and stepdaughter of William Godwin, writer of Political Justice and Caleb Williams. Allegra is not entitled to the style "The Hon." as is usually given to the daughter of barons, since she was born outside of his marriage. Born in Bath in 1817, Allegra lived with Byron for a few months in Venice; he refused to allow an Englishwoman caring for the girl to adopt her and objected to her being raised in the Shelleys' household.[69] He wished for her to be brought up Catholic and not marry an Englishman, and he made arrangements for her to inherit 5,000 lire upon marriage or when she reached the age of 21, provided she did not marry a native of Britain. However, the girl died aged five of a fever in Bagnacavallo, Italy, while Byron was in Pisa; he was deeply upset by the news. He had Allegra's body sent back to England to be buried at his old school, Harrow, because Protestants could not be buried in consecrated ground in Catholic countries. At one time he himself had wanted to be buried at Harrow. Byron was antagonistic towards Allegra's mother, Claire Clairmont, and prevented her from seeing the child.[69]

Scotland edit

Although neglected by traditional historiography,[134] Byron had a complex identity and strong ties to Scotland. His maternal family, the Gordons, had its roots in Aberdeenshire and Byron was educated at Aberdeen Grammar School between 1794 and 1798. In terms of his own identity, he described himself as "half a Scot by birth, and bred/A whole one" and he reportedly spoke with a faint Scottish accent throughout his life.[135] Byron was regarded as a Scot by a number of his contemporaries, including his lover Lady Caroline Lamb and by his first biographer Sir Cosmo Gordon, who described him as a "Highlander".[136]

Byron's links to Scotland were demonstrated "in his campaign for the liberation of Greece, where a disproportionate number of his closest friends and associates had strong Scottish connexions, particularly with regard to north-eastern Scotland, which through his Gordon links remained central to the Byronic network throughout his life".[136]

Sea and swimming edit

Byron enjoyed adventure, especially relating to the sea.[21]

The first recorded notable example of open water swimming took place on 3 May 1810 when Lord Byron swam from Europe to Asia across the Hellespont Strait.[137] This is often seen as the birth of the sport and pastime, and to commemorate it, the event is recreated every year as an open water swimming event.[138]

Whilst sailing from Genoa to Cephalonia in 1823, every day at noon, Byron and Trelawny, in calm weather, jumped overboard for a swim without fear of sharks, which were not unknown in those waters. Once, according to Trelawny, they let the geese and ducks loose and followed them and the dogs into the water, each with an arm in the ship Captain's new scarlet waistcoat, to the annoyance of the Captain and the amusement of the crew.[139]

Fondness for animals edit

Byron had a great love of animals, most notably for a Newfoundland dog named Boatswain. When the animal contracted rabies, Byron nursed him, albeit unsuccessfully, without any thought or fear of becoming bitten and infected.[140][141]

Although deeply in debt at the time, Byron commissioned an impressive marble funerary monument for Boatswain at Newstead Abbey, larger than his own, and the only building work that he ever carried out on his estate. In his 1811 will, Byron requested that he be buried with him.[69] The 26‐line poem "Epitaph to a Dog" has become one of his best-known works. But a draft of an 1830 letter by Hobhouse shows him to be the author; Byron decided to use Hobhouse's lengthy epitaph instead of his own, which read: "To mark a friend's remains these stones arise/I never knew but one – and here he lies."[142]

In a letter sent to Thomas Moore,[143] Byron admitted to follow a diet "inspired by Pythagoras", who was a famous vegetarian.

Byron also kept a tame bear while he was a student at Trinity out of resentment for rules forbidding pet dogs like his beloved Boatswain. There being no mention of bears in their statutes, the college authorities had no legal basis for complaining; Byron even suggested that he would apply for a college fellowship for the bear.[144]

During his lifetime, in addition to numerous cats, dogs, and horses, Byron kept a fox, monkeys, an eagle, a crow, a falcon, peacocks, guinea hens, an Egyptian crane, a badger, geese, a heron, and a goat.[145] Except for the horses, they all resided indoors at his homes in England, Switzerland, Italy, and Greece.[2] Percy Shelley, visiting Byron in Italy in 1821, described his menagerie:[146]

"Lord B's establishment consists, besides servants, of ten horses, eight enormous dogs, three monkeys, five cats, an eagle, a crow, and a falcon; and all these, except the horses, walk about the house, which every now and then resounds with their unarbitrated quarrels, as if they were the masters of it… P.S. I find that my enumeration of the animals in this Circean Palace was defective…I have just met on the grand staircase five peacocks, two guinea hens, and an Egyptian crane.

— Percy Shelley, Diary of Percy Shelley

Health and appearance edit

 
Byron in 1830

Character and psyche edit

I am such a strange mélange of good and evil that it would be difficult to describe me.[147]

As a boy, Byron's character is described as a "mixture of affectionate sweetness and playfulness, by which it was impossible not to be attached", although he also exhibited "silent rages, moody sullenness and revenge" with a precocious bent for attachment and obsession.[116]

Deformed foot edit

From birth, Byron had a deformity of his right foot. Although it has generally been referred to as a "club foot", some modern medical authors maintain that it was a consequence of infantile paralysis (poliomyelitis), and others that it was a dysplasia, a failure of the bones to form properly.[148] Whatever the cause, he was affected by a limp that caused him lifelong psychological and physical misery, aggravated by painful and pointless "medical treatment" in his childhood and the nagging suspicion that with proper care it might have been cured.[149][150]

He was extremely self-conscious about this from a young age, nicknaming himself le diable boîteux[151] (French for "the limping devil", after the nickname given to Asmodeus by Alain-René Lesage in his 1707 novel of the same name). Although he often wore specially-made shoes in an attempt to hide the deformed foot,[46] he refused to wear any type of brace that might improve the limp.[21]

Scottish novelist John Galt felt his oversensitivity to the "innocent fault in his foot was unmanly and excessive" because the limp was "not greatly conspicuous". He first met Byron on a voyage to Sardinia and did not realise he had any deficiency for several days, and still could not tell at first if the lameness was a temporary injury or not. At the time Galt met him he was an adult and had worked to develop "a mode of walking across a room by which it was scarcely at all perceptible".[23] The motion of the ship at sea may also have helped to create a favourable first impression and hide any deficiencies in his gait, but Galt's biography is also described as being "rather well-meant than well-written", so Galt may be guilty of minimising a defect that was actually still noticeable.[152]

Physical appearance edit

 
Lord Byron by Henry Pierce Bone

Byron's adult height was 5 feet 9 inches (1.75 m), his weight fluctuating between 9.5 stone (133 lb; 60 kg) and 14 stone (200 lb; 89 kg). He was renowned for his personal beauty, which he enhanced by wearing curl-papers in his hair at night.[153] He was athletic, being a competent boxer and horse-rider and an excellent swimmer. He attended pugilistic tuition at the Bond Street rooms of former prizefighting champion 'Gentleman' John Jackson, whom Byron called 'the Emperor of Pugilism', and recorded these sparring sessions in his letters and journals.[154]

Byron and other writers, such as his friend Hobhouse, described his eating habits in detail. At the time he entered Cambridge, he went on a strict diet to control his weight. He also exercised a great deal, and at that time wore a great many clothes to cause himself to perspire. For most of his life, he was a vegetarian and often lived for days on dry biscuits and white wine. Occasionally he would eat large helpings of meat and desserts, after which he would purge himself. Although he is described by Galt and others as having a predilection for "violent" exercise, Hobhouse suggests that the pain in his deformed foot made physical activity difficult and that his weight problem was the result.[153]

Trelawny, who observed Byron's eating habits, noted that he lived on a diet of biscuits and soda water for days at a time and then would eat a "horrid mess of cold potatoes, rice, fish, or greens, deluged in vinegar, and gobble it up like a famished dog".[155][156]

Political career edit

Byron first took his seat in the House of Lords on 13 March 1809[157] but left London on 11 June 1809 for the Continent.[158] Byron's association with the Holland House Whigs provided him with a discourse of liberty rooted in the Glorious Revolution of 1688.[159] A strong advocate of social reform, he received particular praise as one of the few Parliamentary defenders of the Luddites: specifically, he was against a death penalty for Luddite "frame breakers" in Nottinghamshire, who destroyed textile machines that were putting them out of work. His first speech before the Lords, on 27 February 1812, was loaded with sarcastic references to the "benefits" of automation, which he saw as producing inferior material as well as putting people out of work, and concluded the proposed law was only missing two things to be effective: "Twelve Butchers for a Jury and a Jeffries for a Judge!". Byron's speech was officially recorded and printed in Hansard.[160] He said later that he "spoke very violent sentences with a sort of modest impudence" and thought he came across as "a bit theatrical".[161] The full text of the speech, which he had previously written out, was presented to Dallas in manuscript form and he quotes it in his work.[162]

Two months later, in conjunction with the other Whigs, Byron made another impassioned speech before the House of Lords in support of Catholic emancipation.[159][163] Byron expressed opposition to the established religion because it was unfair to people of other faiths.[164]

These experiences inspired Byron to write political poems such as Song for the Luddites (1816) and The Landlords' Interest, Canto XIV of The Age of Bronze.[165] Examples of poems in which he attacked his political opponents include Wellington: The Best of the Cut-Throats (1819) and The Intellectual Eunuch Castlereagh (1818).[166]

Poetic works edit

Byron wrote prolifically.[167] In 1832 his publisher, John Murray, released the complete works in 14 duodecimo volumes, including a life[161] by Thomas Moore. Subsequent editions were released in 17 volumes, first published a year later, in 1833. An extensive collection of his works, including early editions and annotated manuscripts, is held within the John Murray Archive at the National Library of Scotland in Edinburgh.

Don Juan edit

Byron's magnum opus, Don Juan, a poem spanning 17 cantos, ranks as one of the most important long poems published in England since John Milton's Paradise Lost.[168] Byron published the first two cantos anonymously in 1819 after disputes with his regular publisher over the shocking nature of the poetry. By this time, he had been a famous poet for seven years, and when he self-published the beginning cantos, they were well received in some quarters. The poem was then released volume by volume through his regular publishing house.[47] By 1822, cautious acceptance by the public had turned to outrage, and Byron's publisher refused to continue to publish the work. In Canto III of Don Juan, Byron expresses his detestation for poets such as William Wordsworth and Samuel Taylor Coleridge.[47][169] In letters to Francis Hodgson, Byron referred to Wordsworth as "Turdsworth".[170]

Irish Avatar edit

Byron wrote the satirical pamphlet Irish Avatar after the royal visit by King George IV to Ireland. Byron criticised the attitudes displayed by the Irish people towards the Crown, an institution he perceived as oppressing them, and was dismayed by the positive reception George IV received during his visit. In the pamphlet, Byron lambasted Irish unionists and voiced muted support towards nationalistic sentiments in Ireland.[171]

Parthenon marbles edit

Byron was a bitter opponent of Lord Elgin's removal of the Parthenon marbles from Athens and "reacted with fury" when Elgin's agent gave him a tour of the Parthenon, during which he saw the spaces left by the missing part of the frieze and metopes. He denounced Elgin's actions in his poem The Curse of Minerva and in Canto II (stanzas XI–XV) of Childe Harold's Pilgrimage.[172]

Legacy and influence edit

 
Stained glass at Ottawa Public Library featuring Charles Dickens, Archibald Lampman, Sir Walter Scott, Byron, Alfred, Lord Tennyson, William Shakespeare, and Thomas Moore

Byron's image as the personification of the Byronic hero fascinated the public, and his wife Annabella coined the term "Byromania" to refer to the commotion surrounding him.[46] His self-awareness and personal promotion are seen as a beginning of what would become the modern rock star; he would instruct artists painting portraits of him not to paint him with pen or book in hand, but as a "man of action."[46] While Byron first welcomed fame, he later turned from it by going into voluntary exile from Britain.[35]

Biographies were distorted by the burning of Byron's Memoirs in the offices of his publisher, John Murray, a month after his death and the suppression of details of Byron's bisexuality by subsequent heads of the firm (which held the richest Byron archive). As late as the 1950s, scholar Leslie Marchand was expressly forbidden by the Murray company to reveal details of Byron's same-sex passions.[46]

The re-founding of the Byron Society in 1971 reflected the fascination that many people had with Byron and his work.[173] This society became very active, publishing an annual journal. Thirty-six Byron Societies function throughout the world, and an International Conference takes place annually.

Byron exercised a marked influence on Continental literature and art, and his reputation as a poet is higher in many European countries than in Britain,[79] or America, although not as high as in his time, when he was widely thought to be the greatest poet in the world.[35] Byron's writings also inspired many composers. Over forty operas have been based on his works, in addition to three operas about Byron himself (including Virgil Thomson's Lord Byron). His poetry was set to music by many Romantic composers, including Beethoven, Schubert, Rossini, Mendelssohn, Schumann and Carl Loewe. Among his greatest admirers was Hector Berlioz, whose operas and Mémoires reveal Byron's influence.[174] In the twentieth century, Arnold Schoenberg set Byron's "Ode to Napoleon" to music.

In April 2020, Byron was featured in a series of UK postage stamps issued by the Royal Mail to commemorate the Romantic poets on the 250th anniversary of the birth of William Wordsworth. Ten 1st class stamps were issued of all the major British romantic poets, and each stamp included an extract from one of their most popular and enduring works, with Byron's "She Walks in Beauty" selected for the poet.[175]

Byronic hero edit

The figure of the Byronic hero pervades much of his work, and Byron himself is considered to epitomise many of the characteristics of this literary figure.[46] The use of a Byronic hero by many authors and artists of the Romantic movement show Byron's influence during the 19th century and beyond, including the Brontë sisters.[46][176] His philosophy was more durably influential in continental Europe than in England; Friedrich Nietzsche admired him, and the Byronic hero was echoed in Nietzsche's Übermensch, or superman.[177]Dimitrios Galanos in his funeral oration for Lord Byron glorified him by saying “IMMORTAL BE THY MEMORY, THOU DESERVEDLY BLESSED AND EVER-TO-BE-REMEMBERED HERO!!!” published in BENGAL HURKARU, Calcutta, October 21, 1824. [1]»

The Byronic hero presents an idealised, but flawed character whose attributes include: great talent; great passion; a distaste for society and social institutions; a lack of respect for rank and privilege (although possessing both); being thwarted in love by social constraint or death; rebellion; exile; an unsavoury secret past; arrogance; overconfidence or lack of foresight; and, ultimately, a self-destructive manner. These types of characters have since become ubiquitous in literature and politics.

In popular culture edit

Bibliography edit

 
The Bride of Abydos or Selim and Zuleika, an 1857 painting by Eugène Delacroix depicting Byron's work
  • Index of Titles
  • Index of First Lines

Major works edit

Selected shorter lyric poems edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c McGann, Jerome (2004). "Byron, George Gordon Noel, sixth Baron Byron (1788–1824), poet". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/4279. ISBN 9780198614128. Retrieved 8 February 2021. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  2. ^ a b "Lord Byron". The British Library. Retrieved 17 October 2020.
  3. ^ Marchand, Leslie A. (15 April 2019). "Lord Byron". Lord Byron | Biography, Poems, Don Juan, Daughter, & Facts. Encyclopædia Britannica. London: Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc.
  4. ^ "Byron and Scotland". Robert Morrison.com.
  5. ^ "Lord Byron (George Gordon)". Poetry Foundation. 30 December 2018. Retrieved 30 December 2018.
  6. ^ "The Nation's Favourite Poet Result – TS Eliot is your winner!". BBC. Retrieved 25 May 2019.
  7. ^ Poets, Academy of American. "About George Gordon Byron | Academy of American Poets". poets.org. Retrieved 5 November 2022.
  8. ^ Perrottet, Tony (29 May 2011). "Lake Geneva as Shelley and Byron Knew It". The New York Times.
  9. ^ "Byron had yet to die to make philhellenism generally acceptable." – Plomer (1970).
  10. ^ Fuegi, J; Francis, J (October–December 2003). "Lovelace & Babbage and the creation of the 1843 'notes'". IEEE Annals of the History of Computing. Washington DC: IEEE Computer Society. 25 (4): 16–26. doi:10.1109/MAHC.2003.1253887.
  11. ^ Phillips, Ana Lena (November–December 2011). "Crowdsourcing Gender Equity: Ada Lovelace Day, and its companion website, aims to raise the profile of women in science and technology". American Scientist. Research Triangle Park, NC: Xi Society. 99 (6): 463. doi:10.1511/2011.93.463.
  12. ^ "Ada Lovelace honoured by Google doodle". The Guardian. London. 10 December 2012. Retrieved 10 December 2012.
  13. ^ Boase & Courtney (1878), p. 792.
  14. ^ Brand 2020, p. 183.
  15. ^ Brand 2020, p. 181.
  16. ^ Brand 2020, pp. 189, 200.
  17. ^ Brand 2020, p. 212.
  18. ^ a b c Galt (1830), Chapter 1.
  19. ^ Brand 2020, p. 221.
  20. ^ Brand 2020, p. 236.
  21. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l "Byron as a Boy; His Mother's Influence – His School Days and Mary Chaworth" (PDF). The New York Times. 26 February 1898. Retrieved 11 July 2008.
  22. ^ Brand 2020, p. 254.
  23. ^ a b Galt (1830), Chapter 3.
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  31. ^ MacCarthy 2002, p. 404.
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  33. ^ MacCarthy 2002, p. 5.
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  37. ^ MacCarthy 2002, p. 39.
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  49. ^ Lansdown (2012).
  50. ^ Crompton (1985), pp. 123–128.
  51. ^ Blackstone (1974).
  52. ^ Marchand, p. 45.
  53. ^ Byron's correspondence and Journals from the Mediterranean, July 1809 – July 1811 Byron to Catherine Gordon Byron, from Gibraltar, 11 August 1809: "I left Seville and rode on to Cadiz through a beautiful country, at Xeres where the Sherry we drink is made I met a great merchant a Mr Gordon of Scotland, who was extremely polite and favoured me with the Inspection of his vaults & cellars so that I quaffed at the Fountain head. – – Cadiz, sweet Cadiz! is the most delightful town I ever beheld..."
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  61. ^ Alexander Kilgour, Anecdotes of Lord Byron: From Authentic Sources; with Remarks Illustrative of His Connection with the Principal Literary of the Present Day, Knight and Lacey, London (1925) – Google Books pg. 32
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  64. ^ Silvia Bordoni (2005). "Lord Byron and Germaine de Staël" (PDF). University of Nottingham.
  65. ^ "The Vampyre by John Polidori". British Library.
  66. ^ Rigby, Mair (November 2004). ""Prey to some cureless disquiet": Polidori's Queer Vampyre at the Margins of Romanticism". Romanticism on the Net (36–37). doi:10.7202/011135ar.
  67. ^ "John Polidori & the Vampyre Byron". www.angelfire.com. Retrieved 26 December 2017.
  68. ^ "'A Fragment', from Mazeppa by Lord George Byron". British Library.
  69. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Elze (1872).
  70. ^ Byron, George Gordon (1870). Lord Byron's Armenian exercises and poetry. Duke University Libraries. Venice : In the island of S. Lazzaro.
  71. ^ a b (in Armenian) Soghomonyan, Soghomon A. "Բայրոն, Ջորջ Նոել Գորդոն" (Byron, George Noel Gordon). Soviet Armenian Encyclopedia. vol. ii. Yerevan, Armenian SSR: Armenian Academy of Sciences, 1976, pp. 266–267.
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  73. ^ Letter to John Cam Hobhouse of Novembre 21, 1819.
  74. ^ Shelley, Percy (1964). Letters: Shelley in Italy. Clarendon Press. p. 330.
  75. ^ Moore, Thomas, Letters and Journals of Lord Byron, London, 1830, p. 612
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  78. ^ Trelawny, Edward, Recollections of the last days of Shelley and Byron, ed. H Frowde 1906, p. 88
  79. ^ a b c Cousin 1910, p. 68.
  80. ^ "Marguerite Gardiner, Countess of Blessington | Orlando". orlando.cambridge.org. Retrieved 30 September 2023.
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  82. ^ a b Brewer 2011, p. 197.
  83. ^ Brewer 2011, pp. 197, 199.
  84. ^ Prell 2009a.
  85. ^ Prell 2009b.
  86. ^ Brewer 2011, p. 201.
  87. ^ Brewer 2011, p. 202.
  88. ^ Brewer 2011, p. 205.
  89. ^ Brewer 2011, pp. 207–208.
  90. ^ a b Brewer 2011, p. 212.
  91. ^ a b c Brewer 2011, p. 210.
  92. ^ Brewer 2011, p. 211.
  93. ^ a b c Brewer 2011, p. 213.
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  97. ^ Brewer 2011, p. 216.
  98. ^ Brewer 2011, p. 217.
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  103. ^ Edgcumbe (1972), pp. 185–190.
  104. ^ Gamba (1975).
  105. ^ Dionysios Solomos. "Εις το Θάνατο του Λόρδου Μπάιρον" [To the Death of Lord Byron] (in Greek). Retrieved 20 November 2008.
  106. ^ . Time. 31 July 1933. Archived from the original on 8 August 2013. Retrieved 20 November 2008.
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  117. ^ Marchand 1982, p. 277.
  118. ^ Marchand 1957, p. 139.
  119. ^ Marchand 1957, p. 435.
  120. ^ a b Marchand 1957, p. 442.
  121. ^ a b Emily A. Bernhard Jackson, "Least Like Saints: The Vexed Issue of Byron's Sexuality, The Byron Journal, (2010) 38#1 pp. 29–37.
  122. ^ Crompton (1985).
  123. ^ Crompton, Louis (8 January 2007). . glbtq.com. Archived from the original on 11 April 2014. Retrieved 16 October 2011.
  124. ^ Contrary to later misconception, Byron was not killed in battle nor died from battle wounds. See also The Dictionary of Misinformation (1975) by Tom Burname, Futura Publications, 1985, pp. 39–40.
  125. ^ a b Wong, Ling-Mei (14 October 2004). . Spartan Daily. San Jose State University. Archived from the original on 7 December 2008. Retrieved 11 July 2008.
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  127. ^ "Ireland: Poetic justice at home of Byron's exiled lover". Sunday Times: Property. Dublin, Ireland: The Times Online. 17 November 2002. Retrieved 21 February 2010. 'Mad, bad and dangerous to know' has become Lord Byron's lasting epitaph. Lady Caroline Lamb coined the phrase after her first meeting with the poet at a society event in 1812.
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  139. ^ Prell 2009a, p. 13.
  140. ^ "Boatswain is dead! He expired in a state of madness on the 10th, after suffering much, yet retaining all the gentleness of his nature to the last, never attempting to do the least injury to anyone near him." Marchand, Leslie A. (ed.), Byron's Letters and Journals (BLJ), Johns Hopkins 2001, Letter to Francis Hodgson, 18 November 1808.
  141. ^ "... the poor animal having been seized with a fit of madness, at the commencement of which so little aware was Lord Byron of the nature of the malady, that more than once, with his bare hand, he wiped away the slaver from the dog's lips during the paroxysm." Moore, Thomas. Letters and Journals of Lord Byron, 1833.
  142. ^ Moore, Doris Langley. The Late Lord Byron. Melville House Publishing, 1961, ch. 10.
  143. ^ Letter to Thomas Moore of January 28, 1817
  144. ^ "I have got a new friend, the finest in the world, a tame bear. When I brought him here, they asked me what I meant to do with him, and my reply was, 'he should sit for a fellowship.'" Marchand, Leslie A. (ed.), Byron's Letters and Journals (BLJ), Johns Hopkins 2001, Letter to Elizabeth Pigot, 26 October 1807:(BLJ I 135-6).
  145. ^ Cochran (2011), pp. 176–177.
  146. ^ Francis, Tiffany (21 April 2015). "Bears, badgers and Boatswain: Lord Byron and his animals". wordsworth.org.
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  148. ^ MacCarthy 2002, pp. 3–4.
  149. ^ Cousin 1910, p. 66.
  150. ^ Gilmour, Ian (2003). The Making of the Poets: Byron and Shelley in Their Time. Carroll & Graf Publishers. p. 35.
  151. ^ "For Byron, his deformed foot became the crucial catastrophe of his life. He saw it as the mark of satanic connection, referring to himself as le diable boiteux, the lame devil." – Eisler (1999), p. 13.
  152. ^ Henley, William Ernest, ed., The works of Lord Byron: Letters, 1804–1813, Volume 1, 1897
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  154. ^ David Snowdon, Writing the Prizefight: Pierce Egan's Boxiana World (Bern, 2013).
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  158. ^ Dallas 1824, p. 65.
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Attribution

Further reading edit

  • Accardo, Peter X. . Web exhibit, Houghton Library, Harvard University, 2011.
  • Brand, Emily (2020). The Fall of the House of Byron: Scandal and Seduction in Georgian England. John Murray Press. ISBN 9781473664319.
  • Calder, Angus (1984), Byron and Scotland, in Hearn, Sheila G. (ed.), Cencrastus No. 15, New Year 1984, pp. 21 – 24, ISSN 0264-0856
  • Calder, Angus (ed.) (1989), Byron and Scotland: Radical or Dandy?, Edinburgh University Press, ISBN 9780852246511
  • Drucker, Peter. 'Byron and Ottoman love: Orientalism, Europeanization and same sex sexualities in the early nineteenth-century Levant' (Journal of European Studies vol. 42 no. 2, June 2012, 140–57).
  • Elfenbein, Andrew. Byron and the Victorians. (Studies in Nineteenth-Century Literature and Culture). Cambridge University Press, 1995. ISBN 978-0-5214-5452-0.
  • Garrett, Martin: George Gordon, Lord Byron. (British Library Writers' Lives). London: British Library, 2000. ISBN 0-7123-4657-0.
  • Garrett, Martin. Palgrave Literary Dictionary of Byron. Palgrave, 2010. ISBN 978-0-230-00897-7.
  • Guiccioli, Teresa, contessa di, Lord Byron's Life in Italy, transl. Michael Rees, ed. Peter Cochran, 2005, ISBN 0-87413-716-0.
  • Grosskurth, Phyllis: Byron: The Flawed Angel. Hodder, 1997. ISBN 0-340-60753-X.
  • Marchand, Leslie A., editor, Byron's Letters and Journals, Harvard University Press:
    • Volume I, 'In my hot youth', 1798–1810, (1973)
    • Volume II, 'Famous in my time', 1810–1812, (1973)
    • Volume III, 'Alas! the love of women', 1813–1814, (1974)
    • Volume IV, 'Wedlock's the devil', 1814–1815, (1975)
    • Volume V, 'So late into the night', 1816–1817, (1976)
    • Volume VI, 'The flesh is frail', 1818–1819, (1976)
    • Volume VII, 'Between two worlds', 1820, (1978)
    • Volume VIII, 'Born for opposition', 1821, (1978)
    • Volume IX, 'In the wind's eye', 1821–1822, (1978)
    • Volume X, 'A heart for every fate', 1822–1823, (1980)
    • Volume XI, 'For freedom's battle', 1823–1824, (1981)
    • Volume XII, 'The trouble of an index', index, (1982)
    • Lord Byron: Selected Letters and Journals, (1982)
  • McGann, Jerome: Byron and Romanticism. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2002. ISBN 0-521-00722-4.
  • Minto, William (1878). "Byron, Lord" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. IV (9th ed.). pp. 604–612.
  • Oueijan, Naji B. A Compendium of Eastern Elements in Byron's Oriental Tales. New York: Peter Lang Publishing, 1999.
  • Patanè, Vincenzo: L'estate di un ghiro. Il mito di Lord Byron attraverso la vita, i viaggi, gli amori e le opere. Venezia, Cicero, 2013. ISBN 978-88-89632-39-0.
  • Patanè, Vincenzo: I frutti acerbi. Lord Byron, gli amori & il sesso. Venezia, Cicero, 2016. ISBN 978-88-89632-42-0.
  • Patanè, Vincenzo: The Sour Fruit. Lord Byron, Love & Sex. Lanham (MD), Rowman & Littlefield, copublished by John Cabot University Press, Rome, 2019. ISBN 978-1-61149-681-9.
  • Raphael, Frederic: Byron. Yale University Press, 1982. ISBN 978-0-50001-278-9.
  • Richardson, Joanna: Lord Byron and Some of His Contemporaries. The Folio Society, 1988.
  • Rosen, Fred: Bentham, Byron and Greece. Clarendon Press, Oxford, 1992. ISBN 0-19-820078-1.
  • Thiollet, Jean-Pierre: Carré d'Art: Barbey d'Aurevilly, lord Byron, Salvador Dalí, Jean-Edern Hallier, with texts by Anne-Élisabeth Blateau and François Roboth [fr], Anagramme éditions, 2008. ISBN 978-2-35035-189-6.

External links edit

Peerage of England
Preceded by Baron Byron
1798–1824
Succeeded by

lord, byron, byron, george, byron, redirect, here, other, uses, byron, disambiguation, george, byron, disambiguation, george, gordon, byron, baron, byron, january, 1788, april, 1824, english, poet, peer, leading, figures, romantic, movement, regarded, among, g. Byron and George Byron redirect here For other uses see Byron disambiguation and George Byron disambiguation George Gordon Byron 6th Baron Byron FRS 22 January 1788 19 April 1824 was an English poet and peer 1 2 He was one of the leading figures of the Romantic movement 3 4 5 and is regarded as among the greatest of English poets 6 Among his best known works are the lengthy narratives Don Juan and Childe Harold s Pilgrimage many of his shorter lyrics in Hebrew Melodies also became popular The Right HonourableThe Lord ByronFRSPortrait by Thomas Phillips c 1813BornGeorge Gordon Byron 1788 01 22 22 January 1788London EnglandDied19 April 1824 1824 04 19 aged 36 Missolonghi Aetolia Ottoman Empire present day Aetolia Acarnania Greece Resting placeChurch of St Mary Magdalene Hucknall NottinghamshireOccupationPoet politicianAlma materTrinity College CambridgeSpouseAnne Isabella Milbanke m 1815 sep 1816 wbr PartnerClaire ClairmontChildrenAda LovelaceAllegra ByronElizabeth Medora Leigh presumed ParentsJohn Mad Jack Byron father Catherine Gordon mother RelativesVice Admiral The Hon John Byron grandfather SignatureMember of the House of LordsLord TemporalIn office 13 March 1809 19 April 1824 Hereditary peeragePreceded byThe 5th Baron ByronSucceeded byThe 7th Baron ByronByron was educated at Trinity College Cambridge before travelling extensively across Europe to places such as Italy where he lived for seven years in Venice Ravenna and Pisa after he was forced to flee England due to being threatened with lynching 7 During his stay in Italy he frequently visited his friend and fellow poet Percy Bysshe Shelley 8 Later in life Byron joined the Greek War of Independence fighting the Ottoman Empire and died leading a campaign during that war for which Greeks revere him as a folk hero 9 He died in 1824 at the age of 36 from a fever contracted after the first and second sieges of Missolonghi His only legitimate child Ada Lovelace was a founding figure in the field of computer programming based on her notes for Charles Babbage s Analytical Engine 10 11 12 Byron s extramarital children include Allegra Byron who died in childhood and possibly Elizabeth Medora Leigh daughter of his half sister Augusta Leigh Contents 1 Early life 2 Education 3 Career 3 1 Early career 3 2 First travels to the East 3 3 England 1811 1816 4 Life abroad 1816 1824 4 1 Switzerland and the Shelleys 4 2 Italy 4 3 Ottoman Greece 5 Death 5 1 Post mortem 6 Personal life 6 1 Relationships and scandals 6 2 Children 6 3 Scotland 6 4 Sea and swimming 6 5 Fondness for animals 7 Health and appearance 7 1 Character and psyche 7 2 Deformed foot 7 3 Physical appearance 8 Political career 9 Poetic works 9 1 Don Juan 9 2 Irish Avatar 10 Parthenon marbles 11 Legacy and influence 11 1 Byronic hero 11 2 In popular culture 12 Bibliography 12 1 Major works 12 2 Selected shorter lyric poems 13 See also 14 References 14 1 Bibliography 15 Further reading 16 External linksEarly life editMain article Early life of Lord Byron nbsp An engraving of Byron s father Captain John Mad Jack Byron date unknownGeorge Gordon Byron was born on 22 January 1788 on Holles Street in London England 1 his birthplace is now supposedly occupied by a branch of the department store John Lewis Byron was the only child of Captain John Byron known as Jack and his second wife Catherine Gordon heiress of the Gight estate in Aberdeenshire Scotland Byron s paternal grandparents were Vice Admiral John Byron and Sophia Trevanion 13 Having survived a shipwreck as a teenage midshipman Vice Admiral John Byron set a new speed record for circumnavigating the globe After he became embroiled in a tempestuous voyage during the American Revolutionary War John was nicknamed Foul Weather Jack Byron by the press 14 Byron s father had previously been somewhat scandalously married to Amelia Marchioness of Carmarthen with whom he had been having an affair the wedding took place just weeks after her divorce from her husband and she was around eight months pregnant 15 The marriage was not a happy one and their first two children Sophia Georgina and an unnamed boy died in infancy 16 Amelia herself died in 1784 almost exactly a year after the birth of their third child the poet s half sister Augusta Mary 17 Though Amelia died from a wasting illness probably tuberculosis the press reported that her heart had been broken out of remorse for leaving her husband Much later 19th century sources blamed Jack s own brutal and vicious treatment of her 18 Jack then married Catherine Gordon of Gight on 13 May 1785 by all accounts only for her fortune 19 To claim his second wife s estate in Scotland Byron s father took the additional surname Gordon becoming John Byron Gordon and occasionally styled himself John Byron Gordon of Gight Byron s mother had to sell her land and title to pay her new husband s debts and in the space of two years the large estate worth some 23 500 had been squandered leaving the former heiress with an annual income in trust of only 150 18 In a move to avoid his creditors Catherine accompanied her profligate husband to France in 1786 but returned to England at the end of 1787 to give birth to her son The boy was born on 22 January in lodgings at Holles Street in London and christened at St Marylebone Parish Church as George Gordon Byron 1 His father appears to have wished to call his son William but as her husband remained absent the young Byron s mother named him after her own father George Gordon of Gight 20 who was a descendant of James I of Scotland and who had died by suicide some four years earlier in 1779 21 nbsp Catherine Gordon Byron s mother by Thomas StewardsonCatherine moved back to Aberdeenshire in 1790 and Byron spent part of his childhood there 21 His father soon joined them in their lodgings in Queen Street but the couple quickly separated Catherine regularly experienced mood swings and bouts of melancholy 21 which could be partly explained by her husband s continuously borrowing money from her As a result she fell even further into debt to support his demands One of these loans enabled him to travel to Valenciennes France where he died of a long amp suffering illness probably tuberculosis in 1791 22 When Byron s great uncle who was posthumously labelled the wicked Lord Byron died on 21 May 1798 the 10 year old boy became the sixth Baron Byron of Rochdale and inherited the ancestral home Newstead Abbey in Nottinghamshire His mother proudly took him to England but the Abbey was in an embarrassing state of disrepair and rather than live there she decided to lease it to Lord Grey de Ruthyn among others during Byron s adolescence citation needed Described as a woman without judgment or self command Catherine either spoiled and indulged her son or vexed him with her capricious stubbornness Her drinking disgusted him and he often mocked her for being short and corpulent which made it difficult for her to catch him to discipline him Byron had been born with a deformed right foot his mother once retaliated and in a fit of temper referred to him as a lame brat 23 However Byron s biographer Doris Langley Moore in her 1974 book Accounts Rendered paints a more sympathetic view of Mrs Byron showing how she was a staunch supporter of her son and sacrificed her own precarious finances to keep him in luxury at Harrow and Cambridge Langley Moore questions 19th century biographer John Galt s claim that she over indulged in alcohol 24 Byron s mother in law Judith Noel the Hon Lady Milbanke died in 1822 and her will required that he change his surname to Noel in order to inherit half of her estate He accordingly obtained a Royal Warrant enabling him to take and use the surname of Noel only and to subscribe the said surname of Noel before all titles of honour From that point he signed himself Noel Byron the usual signature of a peer being merely the name of the peerage in this case simply Byron Some have speculated that he did this so that his initials would read N B mimicking those of his hero Napoleon Bonaparte Lady Byron eventually succeeded to the Barony of Wentworth becoming Lady Wentworth 25 Education editByron received his early formal education at Aberdeen Grammar School in 1798 until his move back to England as a 10 year old In August 1799 he entered the school of Dr William Glennie in Dulwich 26 Placed under the care of a Dr Bailey he was encouraged to exercise in moderation but could not restrain himself from violent bouts of activity in an attempt to compensate for his deformed foot His mother interfered with his studies often withdrawing him from school which arguably contributed to his lack of self discipline and his neglect of his classical studies In 1801 he was sent to Harrow School where he remained until July 1805 27 21 An undistinguished student and an unskilled cricketer he nevertheless represented the school during the very first Eton v Harrow cricket match at Lord s in 1805 28 His lack of moderation was not restricted to physical exercise Byron fell in love with Mary Chaworth whom he met while at school 21 and she was the reason he refused to return to Harrow in September 1803 His mother wrote He has no indisposition that I know of but love desperate love the worst of all maladies in my opinion In short the boy is distractedly in love with Miss Chaworth 21 In Byron s later memoirs Mary Chaworth is portrayed as the first object of his adult sexual feelings 29 nbsp John FitzGibbon 2nd Earl of ClareByron finally returned in January 1804 21 to a more settled period which saw the formation of a circle of emotional involvements with other Harrow boys which he recalled with great vividness My school friendships were with me passions for I was always violent 30 The most enduring of those was with John FitzGibbon 2nd Earl of Clare four years Byron s junior whom he was to meet again unexpectedly many years later in 1821 in Italy 31 His nostalgic poems about his Harrow friendships Childish Recollections 1806 express a prescient consciousness of sexual differences that may in the end make England untenable to him 32 Letters to Byron in the John Murray archive contain evidence of a previously unremarked if short lived romantic relationship with a younger boy at Harrow John Thomas Claridge 33 The following autumn he entered Trinity College Cambridge 34 where he met and formed a close friendship with the younger John Edleston About his protege he wrote He has been my almost constant associate since October 1805 when I entered Trinity College His voice first attracted my attention his countenance fixed it and his manners attached me to him for ever After Edleston s death Byron composed Thyrza a series of elegies in his memory 35 In later years he described the affair as a violent though pure love and passion This statement however needs to be read in the context of hardening public attitudes toward homosexuality in England and the severe sanctions including public hanging imposed upon convicted or even suspected offenders 36 The liaison on the other hand may well have been pure out of respect for Edleston s innocence in contrast to the probably more sexually overt relations experienced at Harrow School 37 The poem The Cornelian was written about the cornelian that Byron had received from Edleston 38 Byron spent three years at Trinity College engaging in sexual escapades boxing horse riding and gambling While at Cambridge he also formed lifelong friendships with men such as John Cam Hobhouse who initiated him into the Cambridge Whig Club which endorsed liberal politics and Francis Hodgson a Fellow at King s College with whom he corresponded on literary and other matters until the end of his life 39 Career editEarly career edit nbsp Byron s house Burgage Manor in Southwell NottinghamshireWhile not at school or college Byron lived at his mother s residence Burgage Manor in Southwell Nottinghamshire 21 While there he cultivated friendships with Elizabeth Bridget Pigot and her brother John with whom he staged two plays for the entertainment of the community During this time with the help of Elizabeth Pigot who copied many of his rough drafts he was encouraged to write his first volumes of poetry Fugitive Pieces was printed by Ridge of Newark which contained poems written when Byron was only 17 40 However it was promptly recalled and burned on the advice of his friend the Reverend J T Becher on account of its more amorous verses particularly the poem To Mary 41 Hours of Idleness a collection of many of the previous poems along with more recent compositions was the culminating book The savage anonymous criticism it received now known to be the work of Henry Peter Brougham in the Edinburgh Review prompted Byron to compose his first major satire 42 English Bards and Scotch Reviewers 1809 27 Byron put it into the hands of his relative R C Dallas and asked him to get it published without his name 43 Alexander Dallas suggested a large number of changes to the manuscript and provided the reasoning for some of them Dallas also stated that Byron had originally intended to prefix an argument to this poem which Dallas quoted 44 Although it was published anonymously that April R C Dallas wrote that you are already pretty generally known to be the author 45 The work so upset some of his critics that they challenged Byron to a duel over time in subsequent editions it became a mark of prestige to be the target of Byron s pen 42 nbsp Autograph letter signed to John Hanson Byron s lawyer and business agent Fondazione BEICAfter his return from travels he entrusted R C Dallas as his literary agent with the publication of his poem Childe Harold s Pilgrimage which Byron thought to be of little account The first two cantos of Childe Harold s Pilgrimage were published in 1812 and were received with critical acclaim 46 47 In Byron s own words I awoke one morning and found myself famous 48 He followed up this success with the poem s last two cantos as well as four equally celebrated Oriental Tales The Giaour The Bride of Abydos The Corsair and Lara About the same time he began his intimacy with his future biographer Thomas Moore 27 First travels to the East edit nbsp Byron s Stone in Tepelene Albania nbsp Teresa Makri in 1870Byron racked up numerous debts as a young man owing to what his mother termed a reckless disregard for money 21 She lived at Newstead during this time in fear of her son s creditors 21 He had planned to spend some time in 1808 cruising with his cousin George Bettesworth who was captain of the 32 gun frigate HMS Tartar but Bettesworth s death at the Battle of Alvoen in May 1808 made that impossible From 1809 to 1811 49 Byron went on the Grand Tour then a customary part of the education of young noblemen He travelled with Hobhouse for the first year and his entourage of servants included Byron s trustworthy valet William Fletcher Hobhouse and Byron often made Fletcher the butt of their humour The Napoleonic Wars forced Byron to avoid touring in most of Europe he instead turned to the Mediterranean His journey enabled him to avoid his creditors and to meet up with a former love Mary Chaworth the subject of his poem To a Lady On Being Asked My Reason for Quitting England in the Spring 42 Letters to Byron from his friend Charles Skinner Matthews reveal that a key motive was also the hope of homosexual experiences 50 Another reason for choosing to visit the Mediterranean was probably his curiosity about the Levant he had read about the Ottoman and Persian lands as a child was attracted to Islam especially Sufi mysticism and later wrote With these countries and events connected with them all my really poetical feelings begin and end 51 52 Byron began his trip in Portugal from where he wrote a letter to his friend Mr Hodgson in which he describes what he had learned of the Portuguese language mainly swear words and insults Byron particularly enjoyed his stay in Sintra which he later described in Childe Harold s Pilgrimage as glorious Eden From Lisbon he travelled overland to Seville Jerez de la Frontera Cadiz and Gibraltar and from there by sea to Sardinia Malta Albania and Greece 53 54 The purpose of Byron s and Hobhouse s travel to Albania was to meet Ali Pasha of Ioannina and to see the country that was until then mostly unknown in Britain 54 While in Athens Byron met 14 year old Nicolo Giraud with whom he became intimate 55 56 and who taught him Italian Byron arranged to have Giraud enrolled in school at a monastery in Malta and wrote him into his will with a bequest of 7 000 That will however was later cancelled 57 Byron wrote to Hobhouse from Athens I am tired of pl amp opt Cs the last thing I could be tired of Opt Cs refers to a quote from Petronius Satyricon coitum plenum et optabilem complete intercourse to one s heart s desire their shared code for homosexual experiences 58 In Athens in 1810 Byron wrote Maid of Athens ere we part for a 12 year old girl Teresa Makri 1798 1875 Byron and Hobhouse made their way to Smyrna where they cadged a ride to Constantinople on HMS Salsette On 3 May 1810 while Salsette was anchored awaiting Ottoman permission to dock at the city Byron and Lieutenant Ekenhead of Salsette s Marines swam the Hellespont Byron commemorated this feat in the second canto of Don Juan He returned to England from Malta in July 1811 aboard HMS Volage 59 England 1811 1816 edit nbsp Portrait of Byron by Richard WestallAfter the publication of the first two cantos of Childe Harold s Pilgrimage 1812 Byron became a celebrity He rapidly became the most brilliant star in the dazzling world of Regency London He was sought after at every society venue elected to several exclusive clubs and frequented the most fashionable London drawing rooms 26 During this period in England he produced many works including The Giaour The Bride of Abydos 1813 Parisina and The Siege of Corinth 1815 On the initiative of the composer Isaac Nathan he produced in 1814 1815 the Hebrew Melodies including what became some of his best known lyrics such as She Walks in Beauty and The Destruction of Sennacherib Involved at first in an affair with Lady Caroline Lamb who called him mad bad and dangerous to know and with other lovers and also pressed by debt he began to seek a suitable marriage considering amongst others Annabella Millbanke 60 However in 1813 he met for the first time in four years his half sister Augusta Leigh Rumours of incest surrounded the pair Augusta s daughter Medora b 1814 was suspected to have been Byron s child To escape from growing debts and rumours Byron pressed in his determination to marry Annabella who was said to be the likely heiress of a rich uncle They married on 2 January 1815 and their daughter Ada was born in December of that year However Byron s continuing obsession with Augusta Leigh and his continuing sexual escapades with actresses such as Charlotte Mardyn 61 62 and others made their marital life a misery Annabella considered Byron insane and in January 1816 she left him taking their daughter and began proceedings for a legal separation Their separation was made legal in a private settlement in March 1816 The scandal of the separation the rumours about Augusta and ever increasing debts forced him to leave England in April 1816 never to return 26 Life abroad 1816 1824 editSwitzerland and the Shelleys edit nbsp Percy Bysshe Shelley 1819 nbsp Claire Clairmont 1819 nbsp Mary Shelley 1840After this break up of his domestic life and by pressure on the part of his creditors which led to the sale of his library Byron left England 27 and never returned Despite his dying wishes however his body was returned for burial in England He journeyed through Belgium and continued up the Rhine river In the summer of 1816 he settled at the Villa Diodati by Lake Geneva Switzerland with his personal physician John William Polidori There Byron befriended the poet Percy Bysshe Shelley and Shelley s future wife Mary Godwin He was also joined by Mary s stepsister Claire Clairmont with whom he d had an affair in London which subsequently resulted in the birth of their illegitimate child Allegra who died at the age of 5 under the care of Byron later in life 63 Several times Byron went to see Germaine de Stael and her Coppet group which turned out to be a valid intellectual and emotional support to Byron at the time 64 nbsp Frontispiece to a c 1825 edition of Childe Harold s PilgrimageKept indoors at the Villa Diodati by the incessant rain of that wet ungenial summer over three days in June the five turned to reading fantastical stories including Fantasmagoriana and then devising their own tales Mary Shelley produced what would become Frankenstein or The Modern Prometheus and Polidori produced The Vampyre 65 the progenitor of the Romantic vampire genre 66 67 The Vampyre was the inspiration for a fragmentary story of Byron s A Fragment 68 Byron s story fragment was published as a postscript to Mazeppa he also wrote the third canto of Childe Harold Italy edit Byron wintered in Venice pausing in his travels when he fell in love with Marianna Segati in whose Venice house he was lodging and who was soon replaced by 22 year old Margarita Cogni both women were married Cogni could not read or write and she left her husband to move in with Byron Their fighting often caused Byron to spend the night in his gondola when he asked her to leave the house she threw herself into the Venetian canal 69 nbsp Byron s visit to San Lazzaro degli Armeni as depicted in Ivan Aivazovsky s 1899 portraitIn 1816 Byron visited San Lazzaro degli Armeni in Venice where he acquainted himself with Armenian culture with the help of the monks belonging to the Mechitarist Order With the help of Father Pascal Aucher Harutiun Avkerian he learned the Armenian language 69 70 and attended many seminars about language and history He co authored Grammar English and Armenian in 1817 an English textbook written by Aucher and corrected by Byron and A Grammar Armenian and English in 1819 a project he initiated of a grammar of Classical Armenian for English speakers where he included quotations from classical and modern Armenian 69 Byron later helped to compile the English Armenian Dictionary Barraran angleren yev hayeren 1821 and wrote the preface in which he explained Armenian oppression by the Turkish pashas and the Persian satraps and the Armenian struggle of liberation His two main translations are the Epistle of Paul to the Corinthians two chapters of Movses Khorenatsi s History of Armenia and sections of Nerses of Lambron s Orations 71 His fascination was so great that he even considered a replacement of the Cain story of the Bible with that of the legend of the Armenian patriarch Haik He may be credited with the birth of Armenology and its propagation His profound lyricism and ideological courage have inspired many Armenian poets the likes of Ghevond Alishan Smbat Shahaziz Hovhannes Tumanyan Ruben Vorberian and others 71 In 1817 he journeyed to Rome On returning to Venice he wrote the fourth canto of Childe Harold About the same time he sold Newstead Abbey and published Manfred Cain and The Deformed Transformed The first five cantos of Don Juan were written between 1818 and 1820 27 During this period he met the 21 year old Countess Guiccioli who found her first love in Byron he asked her to elope with him 27 69 72 After considering migrating to Venezuela or to the Cape Colony 73 Byron finally decided to leave Venice for Ravenna Because of his love for the local aristocratic young newly married Teresa Guiccioli Byron lived in Ravenna from 1819 to 1821 Here he continued Don Juan and wrote the Ravenna Diary and My Dictionary and Recollections Around this time he received visits from Percy Bysshe Shelley as well as from Thomas Moore to whom he confided his autobiography or life and adventures which Moore Hobhouse and Byron s publisher John Murray 69 burned in 1824 a month after Byron s death 46 Of Byron s lifestyle in Ravenna we know more from Shelley who documented some of its more colourful aspects in a letter Lord Byron gets up at two I get up quite contrary to my usual custom at 12 After breakfast we sit talking till six From six to eight we gallop through the pine forest which divide Ravenna from the sea we then come home and dine and sit up gossiping till six in the morning I don t suppose this will kill me in a week or fortnight but I shall not try it longer Lord B s establishment consists besides servants of ten horses eight enormous dogs three monkeys five cats an eagle a crow and a falcon and all these except the horses walk about the house which every now and then resounds with their unarbitrated quarrels as if they were the masters of it P S I find that my enumeration of the animals in this Circean Palace was defective I have just met on the grand staircase five peacocks two guinea hens and an Egyptian crane I wonder who all these animals were before they were changed into these shapes 74 nbsp Byron s Grotto in Porto Venere Italy named in Byron s honour because according to local legend he meditated here and drew inspiration from this place for his literary works nbsp A 19th century sculptural composition by Henri Michel Chapu and Alexandre Falguiere depicting Greece in the form of a female figure crowning Lord Byron in the National Park in Athens Agalma Lordoy Byrwnos In 1821 Byron left Ravenna and went to live in the Tuscan city of Pisa to which Teresa had also relocated From 1821 to 1822 Byron finished Cantos 6 12 of Don Juan at Pisa and in the same year he joined with Leigh Hunt and Shelley in starting a short lived newspaper The Liberal in whose first number The Vision of Judgment appeared 27 For the first time since his arrival in Italy Byron found himself tempted to give dinner parties his guests included the Shelleys Edward Ellerker Williams Thomas Medwin John Taaffe and Edward John Trelawny and never as Shelley said did he display himself to more advantage than on these occasions being at once polite and cordial full of social hilarity and the most perfect good humour never diverging into ungraceful merriment and yet keeping up the spirit of liveliness throughout the evening 75 Shelley and Williams rented a house on the coast and had a schooner built Byron decided to have his own yacht and engaged Trelawny s friend Captain Daniel Roberts to design and construct the boat Named the Bolivar it was later sold to Charles John Gardiner 1st Earl of Blessington and Marguerite Countess of Blessington when Byron left for Greece in 1823 76 77 Byron attended the beachside cremation of Shelley which was orchestrated by Trelawny after Williams and Shelley drowned in a boating accident on 8 July 1822 78 His last Italian home was in Genoa 79 While living there he was accompanied by the Countess Guiccioli 79 and the Blessingtons Lady Blessington based much of the material in her book Conversations with Lord Byron on the time spent together there 80 This book became an important biographical text about Byron s life just prior to his death Ottoman Greece edit Further information Greek War of Independence nbsp Lord Byron in Albanian dress by Thomas Phillips 1813 Venizelos Mansion Athens the British Ambassador s residence Byron was living in Genoa in 1823 when growing bored with his life there he accepted overtures for his support from representatives of the Greek independence movement from the Ottoman Empire 81 At first Byron did not wish to leave his 22 year old mistress Countess Teresa Guiccioli who had abandoned her husband to live with him But ultimately Guiccioli s father Count Gamba was allowed to leave his exile in the Romagna under the condition that his daughter return to him without Byron 82 At the same time that the philhellene Edward Blaquiere was attempting to recruit him Byron was confused as to what he was supposed to do in Greece writing Blaquiere seemed to think that I might be of some use even here though what he did not exactly specify 82 With the assistance of his banker and Captain Daniel Roberts Byron chartered the brig Hercules to take him to Greece When Byron left Genoa it caused passionate grief from Guiccioli who wept openly as he sailed away The Hercules was forced to return to port shortly afterwards When it set sail for the final time Guiccioli had already left Genoa 83 On 16 July Byron left Genoa arriving at Kefalonia in the Ionian Islands on 4 August His voyage is covered in detail in Donald Prell s Sailing with Byron from Genoa to Cephalonia 84 Prell also wrote of a coincidence in Byron s chartering the Hercules The vessel was launched only a few miles south of Seaham Hall where in 1815 Byron married Annabella Milbanke Between 1815 and 1823 the vessel was in service between England and Canada Suddenly in 1823 the ship s Captain decided to sail to Genoa and offer the Hercules for charter After taking Byron to Greece the ship returned to England never again to venture into the Mediterranean The Hercules was aged 37 when on 21 September 1852 she went aground near Hartlepool 25 miles south of Sunderland the place where her keel had been laid in 1815 Byron s keel was laid nine months before his official birth date 22 January 1788 Therefore in ship years he was also 37 when he died in Missolonghi 85 Byron initially stayed on the island of Kefalonia where he was besieged by agents of the rival Greek factions all of whom wanted to recruit Byron for their own cause 86 The Ionian islands of which Kefalonia is one were under British rule until 1864 Byron spent 4 000 of his own money to refit the Greek fleet 87 When Byron travelled to the mainland of Greece on the night of 28 December 1823 Byron s ship was surprised by an Ottoman warship which did not attack his ship as the Ottoman captain mistook Byron s boat for a fireship To avoid the Ottoman Navy which he encountered several times on his voyage Byron was forced to take a roundabout route and only reached Missolonghi on 5 January 1824 88 After arriving in Missolonghi Byron joined forces with Alexandros Mavrokordatos a Greek politician with military power Byron moved to the second floor of a two story house and was forced to spend much of his time dealing with unruly Souliotes who demanded that Byron pay them the back pay owed to them by the Greek government 89 Byron gave the Souliotes some 6 000 90 Byron was supposed to lead an attack on the Ottoman fortress of Navpaktos whose Albanian garrison were unhappy due to arrears in pay and who offered to put up only token resistance if Byron was willing to bribe them into surrendering However Ottoman commander Yussuf Pasha executed the mutinous Albanian officers who were offering to surrender Navpaktos to Byron and arranged to have some of the arrears paid out to the rest of the garrison 91 Byron never led the attack on Navpaktos because the Souliotes kept demanding that Byron pay them more and more money before they would march Byron grew tired of their blackmail and sent them all home on 15 February 1824 91 Byron wrote in a note to himself Having tried in vain at every expense considerable trouble and some danger to unite the Suliotes for the good of Greece and their own I have come to the following resolution I will have nothing more to do with the Suliotes they may go to the Turks or the devil they may cut me into more pieces than they have dissensions among them sooner than change my resolution 91 At the same time Guiccioli s brother Pietro Gamba who had followed Byron to Greece exasperated Byron with his incompetence as he continually made expensive mistakes For example when asked to buy some cloth from Corfu Gamba ordered the wrong cloth in excess causing the bill to be 10 times higher than what Byron wanted 92 Byron wrote about his right hand man Gamba who is anything but lucky had something to do with it and as usual the moment he had matters went wrong 90 nbsp The reception of Lord Byron at MissolonghiTo help raise money for the revolution Byron sold his estate in England Rochdale Manor which raised some 11 250 This led Byron to estimate that he now had some 20 000 at his disposal all of which he planned to spend on the Greek cause 93 In today s money Byron would have been a millionaire many times over News that a fabulously wealthy British aristocrat known for his financial generosity had arrived in Greece made Byron the object of much solicitation in that desperately poor country 93 Byron wrote to his business agent in England I should not like to give the Greeks but a half helping hand saying he would have wanted to spend his entire fortune on Greek freedom 93 Byron found himself besieged by various people both Greek and foreign who tried to persuade him to open his pocketbook for support By the end of March 1824 the so called Byron brigade of 30 philhellene officers and about 200 men had been formed paid for entirely by Byron 94 Leadership of the Greek cause in the Roumeli region was divided between two rival leaders a former Klepht bandit Odysseas Androutsos and a wealthy Phanariot Prince Alexandros Mavrokordatos Byron used his prestige to attempt to persuade the two rival leaders to come together to focus on defeating the Ottomans 95 At the same time other leaders of the Greek factions like Petrobey Mavromichalis and Theodoros Kolokotronis wrote letters to Byron telling him to disregard all of the Roumeliot leaders and to come to their respective areas in the Peloponnese This drove Byron to distraction he complained that the Greeks were hopelessly disunited and spent more time feuding with each other than trying to win independence 96 Byron s friend Edward John Trelawny had aligned himself with Androutsos who ruled Athens and was now pressing for Byron to break with Mavrokordatos in favour of backing the rival Androutsos 94 Androutsos having won over Trelawny to his cause was now anxious to persuade Byron to put his wealth behind his claim to be the leader of Greece 97 Byron wrote with disgust about how one of the Greek captains former Klepht Georgios Karaiskakis attacked Missolonghi on 3 April 1824 with some 150 men supported by the Souliotes as he was unhappy with Mavrokordatos s leadership which led to a brief bout of inter Greek fighting before Karaiskakis was chased away by April 6 98 Byron adopted a nine year old Turkish Muslim girl called Hato whose parents had been killed by the Greeks He ultimately sent her to safety in Kefalonia knowing well that religious hatred between the Orthodox Greeks and Muslim Turks was running high and that any Muslim in Greece even a child was in serious danger 99 Until 1934 most Turks did not have surnames Hato s lack of a surname was quite typical for a Turkish family at this time Byron pursued his Greek page Lukas Chalandritsanos with whom he had fallen madly in love but the affections went unrequited 46 99 Byron spoiled the teenage Chalandritsanos outrageously spending some 600 the equivalent of about 24 600 in today s money catering to his every whim over the course of 6 months and writing his last poems about his passion for the Greek boy Chalandritsanos was only interested in Byron s money 99 When the famous Danish sculptor Bertel Thorvaldsen heard about Byron s heroics in Greece he voluntarily resculpted his earlier bust of Byron in Greek marble 69 Death edit nbsp Lord Byron on His Deathbed by Joseph Denis Odevaere c 1826 The sheet covers Byron s misshapen right foot Mavrokordatos and Byron planned to attack the Turkish held fortress of Lepanto at the mouth of the Gulf of Corinth Byron employed a fire master to prepare artillery and he took part of the rebel army under his own command despite his lack of military experience Before the expedition could sail on February 15 1824 he fell ill and bloodletting weakened him further 100 He made a partial recovery but in early April he caught a violent cold the therapeutic bleeding insisted on by his doctors exacerbated it He contracted a violent fever and died in Missolonghi on 19 April 100 His physician at the time Julius van Millingen son of Dutch English archaeologist James Millingen was unable to prevent his death It has been said that if Byron had lived and had gone on to defeat the Ottomans he might have been declared King of Greece However modern scholars have found such an outcome unlikely 46 The British historian David Brewer wrote that in one sense Byron failed to persuade the rival Greek factions to unite won no victories and was successful only in the humanitarian sphere using his great wealth to help the victims of the war Christian and Muslim but this did not affect the outcome of the Greek war of independence 101 Brewer went on to argue In another sense though Byron achieved everything he could have wished His presence in Greece and in particular his death there drew to the Greek cause not just the attention of sympathetic nations but their increasing active participation Despite the critics Byron is primarily remembered with admiration as a poet of genius with something approaching veneration as a symbol of high ideals and with great affection as a man for his courage and his ironic slant on life for his generosity to the grandest of causes and to the humblest of individuals for the constant interplay of judgment and sympathy In Greece he is still revered as no other foreigner and as very few Greeks are and like a Homeric hero he is accorded an honorific standard epithet megalos kai kalos a great and good man 102 Post mortem edit nbsp A Narrative of Lord Byron s Last Journey to Greece by Pietro Gamba 1825 Alfred Tennyson would later recall the shocked reaction in Britain when word was received of Byron s death 46 The Greeks mourned Lord Byron deeply and he became a hero 103 104 The national poet of Greece Dionysios Solomos wrote a poem about the unexpected loss named To the Death of Lord Byron 105 Byrwn the Greek form of Byron continues in popularity as a masculine name in Greece and a suburb of Athens is called Vyronas in his honour Byron s body was embalmed but the Greeks wanted some part of their hero to stay with them According to some sources his heart remained at Missolonghi 106 His other remains were sent to England accompanied by his faithful manservant Tita for burial in Westminster Abbey but the Abbey refused for reason of questionable morality 46 107 Huge crowds viewed his coffin as he lay in state for two days at number 25 Great George Street Westminster 108 46 He is buried at the Church of St Mary Magdalene in Hucknall Nottinghamshire 109 A marble slab given by the King of Greece is laid directly above Byron s grave His daughter Ada Lovelace was later buried beside him 110 Byron s friends raised 1 000 to commission a statue of the writer Thorvaldsen offered to sculpt it for that amount 69 However after the statue was completed in 1834 for ten years British institutions turned it down and it remained in storage It was refused by the British Museum St Paul s Cathedral Westminster Abbey and the National Gallery 69 before Trinity College Cambridge finally placed the statue of Byron in its library 69 In 1969 145 years after Byron s death a memorial to him was finally placed in Westminster Abbey 111 112 The memorial had been lobbied for As of 1907 update The New York Times wrote People are beginning to ask whether this ignoring of Byron is not a thing of which England should be ashamed a bust or a tablet might be put in the Poets Corner and England be relieved of ingratitude toward one of her really great sons 113 Robert Ripley had drawn a picture of Boatswain s grave with the caption Lord Byron s dog has a magnificent tomb while Lord Byron himself has none This came as a shock to the English particularly schoolchildren who Ripley said raised funds of their own accord to provide the poet with a suitable memorial 114 Close to the centre of Athens Greece outside the National Garden is a statue depicting Greece in the form of a woman crowning Byron The statue is by the French sculptors Henri Michel Chapu and Alexandre Falguiere As of 2008 update the anniversary of Byron s death 19 April has been honoured in Greece as Byron Day 115 Upon his death the barony passed to Byron s cousin George Anson Byron a career naval officer Personal life editRelationships and scandals edit nbsp Lady Caroline Lamb nbsp Jane Elizabeth Scott Lady Oxford nbsp Augusta Leigh nbsp Anne Isabella Milbanke in 1812 by Charles Hayter nbsp Teresa Contessa GuiccioliByron described his first intense feelings at the age of seven for his distant cousin Mary Duff My mother used always to rally me about this childish amour and at last many years after when I was sixteen she told me one day O Byron I have had a letter from Edinburgh and your old sweetheart Mary Duff is married to Mr C And what was my answer I really cannot explain or account for my feelings at that moment but they nearly threw me into convulsions How the deuce did all this occur so early Where could it originate I certainly had no sexual ideas for years afterwards and yet my misery my love for that girl were so violent that I sometimes doubt if I have ever been really attached since Be that as it may hearing of her marriage several years after was like a thunder stroke it nearly choked me to the horror of my mother and the astonishment and almost incredulity of every body And it is a phenomenon in my existence for I was not eight years old which has puzzled and will puzzle me to the latest hour of it and lately I know not why the recollection not the attachment has recurred as forcibly as ever But the more I reflect the more I am bewildered to assign any cause for this precocity of affection 116 Byron also became attached to Margaret Parker another distant cousin 42 While his recollection of his love for Mary Duff is that he was ignorant of adult sexuality during this time and was bewildered as to the source of the intensity of his feelings he would later confess that My passions were developed very early so early that few would believe me if I were to state the period and the facts which accompanied it Perhaps this was one of the reasons that caused the anticipated melancholy of my thoughts having anticipated life 117 This is the only reference Byron himself makes to the event and he is ambiguous as to how old he was when it occurred After his death his lawyer wrote to a mutual friend telling him a singular fact about Byron s life which was scarcely fit for narration But he disclosed it nonetheless thinking it might explain Byron s sexual propensities When nine years old at his mother s house a Free Scotch girl May sometimes called Mary Gray one of his first caretakers used to come to bed to him and play tricks with his person 118 Gray later used this knowledge as a means of ensuring his silence if he were to be tempted to disclose the low company she kept during drinking binges 119 She was later dismissed supposedly for beating Byron when he was 11 42 A few years later while he was still a child Lord Grey De Ruthyn unrelated to May Gray a suitor of his mother s also made sexual advances on him 120 Byron s personality has been characterised as exceptionally proud and sensitive especially when it came to his foot deformity 18 His extreme reaction to seeing his mother flirting outrageously with Lord Grey De Ruthyn after the incident suggests he did not tell her of Grey s conduct toward him he simply refused to speak to him again and ignored his mother s commands to be reconciled 120 Leslie A Marchand one of Byron s biographers theorises that Lord Grey De Ruthyn s advances prompted Byron s later sexual liaisons with young men at Harrow and Cambridge 46 Scholars acknowledge a more or less important bisexual component in Byron s very complex sentimental and sexual life Bernhard Jackson asserts that Byron s sexual orientation has long been a difficult not to say contentious topic and anyone who seeks to discuss it must to some degree speculate since the evidence is nebulous contradictory and scanty it is not so simple to define Byron as homosexual or heterosexual he seems rather to have been both and either 121 122 Crompton states What was not understood in Byron s own century except by a tiny circle of his associates was that Byron was bisexual 123 Another biographer Fiona MacCarthy has posited that Byron s true sexual yearnings were for adolescent males 46 Byron used a code by which he communicated his homosexual Greek adventures to John Hobhouse in England Bernhard Jackson recalls that Byron s early code for sex with a boy was Plen um and optabil em Coit um 121 Bullough summarises Byron was attached to Nicolo Giraud a young French Greek lad who had been a model for the painter Lusieri before Byron found him Byron left him 7 000 in his will When Byron returned to Italy he became involved with a number of boys in Venice but eventually settled on Loukas Chalandritsanos age 15 who was with him when he was killed sic 124 Crompton 1985 Bullough 1990 p 72 In 1812 Byron embarked on a well publicised affair with the married Lady Caroline Lamb that shocked the British public 125 She had spurned the attention of the poet on their first meeting subsequently giving Byron what became his lasting epitaph when she famously described him as mad bad and dangerous to know 126 This did not prevent her from pursuing him 127 126 Byron eventually broke off the relationship and moved swiftly on to others such as Lady Oxford but Lamb never entirely recovered pursuing him even after he tired of her She was emotionally disturbed and lost so much weight that Byron sarcastically commented to her mother in law his friend Lady Melbourne that he was haunted by a skeleton 128 She began to stalk him calling on him at home sometimes dressed in disguise as a pageboy 125 at a time when such an act could ruin both of them socially Once during such a visit she wrote on a book at his desk Remember me As a retort Byron wrote a poem entitled Remember Thee Remember Thee which concludes with the line Thou false to him thou fiend to me As a child Byron had seen little of his half sister Augusta Leigh in adulthood he formed a close relationship with her that has been interpreted by some as incestuous 128 and by others as innocent 42 Augusta who was married gave birth on 15 April 1814 to her third daughter Elizabeth Medora Leigh rumoured by some to be Byron s Eventually Byron began to court Lady Caroline s cousin Anne Isabella Milbanke Annabella who refused his first proposal of marriage but later accepted him Milbanke was a highly moral woman intelligent and mathematically gifted she was also an heiress They married at Seaham Hall County Durham on 2 January 1815 128 The marriage proved unhappy They had a daughter Augusta Ada On 16 January 1816 Lady Byron left him taking Ada with her That same year on 21 April Byron signed the Deed of Separation Rumours of marital violence adultery with actresses incest with Augusta Leigh and sodomy were circulated assisted by a jealous Lady Caroline 128 In a letter Augusta quoted him as saying Even to have such a thing said is utter destruction and ruin to a man from which he can never recover That same year Lady Caroline published her popular novel Glenarvon in which Lord Byron was portrayed as the seedy title character 129 Children edit nbsp Elizabeth Medora Leigh 1814 1849 nbsp Ada Lovelace 1815 1852 nbsp Clara Allegra Byron 1817 1822 Byron wrote a letter to John Hanson from Newstead Abbey dated 17 January 1809 that includes You will discharge my Cook amp Laundry Maid the other two I shall retain to take care of the house more especially as the youngest is pregnant I need not tell you by whom and I cannot have the girl on the parish 130 His reference to The youngest is understood to have been to a maid Lucy and the parenthesised remark to indicate himself as siring a son born that year In 2010 part of a baptismal record was uncovered which apparently said September 24 George illegitimate son of Lucy Monk illegitimate son of Baron Byron of Newstead Nottingham Newstead Abbey 131 Augusta Leigh s child Elizabeth Medora Leigh born in 1814 was possibly fathered by Byron who was Augusta s half brother Byron had a child The Hon Augusta Ada Byron Ada later Countess of Lovelace in 1815 by his wife Annabella Byron Lady Byron nee Anne Isabella Milbanke or Annabella later Lady Wentworth Ada Lovelace notable in her own right collaborated with Charles Babbage on the analytical engine a predecessor to modern computers She is recognised 132 as one of 133 the world s first computer programmers He also had an extramarital child in 1817 Clara Allegra Byron with Claire Clairmont stepsister of Mary Shelley and stepdaughter of William Godwin writer of Political Justice and Caleb Williams Allegra is not entitled to the style The Hon as is usually given to the daughter of barons since she was born outside of his marriage Born in Bath in 1817 Allegra lived with Byron for a few months in Venice he refused to allow an Englishwoman caring for the girl to adopt her and objected to her being raised in the Shelleys household 69 He wished for her to be brought up Catholic and not marry an Englishman and he made arrangements for her to inherit 5 000 lire upon marriage or when she reached the age of 21 provided she did not marry a native of Britain However the girl died aged five of a fever in Bagnacavallo Italy while Byron was in Pisa he was deeply upset by the news He had Allegra s body sent back to England to be buried at his old school Harrow because Protestants could not be buried in consecrated ground in Catholic countries At one time he himself had wanted to be buried at Harrow Byron was antagonistic towards Allegra s mother Claire Clairmont and prevented her from seeing the child 69 Scotland edit Although neglected by traditional historiography 134 Byron had a complex identity and strong ties to Scotland His maternal family the Gordons had its roots in Aberdeenshire and Byron was educated at Aberdeen Grammar School between 1794 and 1798 In terms of his own identity he described himself as half a Scot by birth and bred A whole one and he reportedly spoke with a faint Scottish accent throughout his life 135 Byron was regarded as a Scot by a number of his contemporaries including his lover Lady Caroline Lamb and by his first biographer Sir Cosmo Gordon who described him as a Highlander 136 Byron s links to Scotland were demonstrated in his campaign for the liberation of Greece where a disproportionate number of his closest friends and associates had strong Scottish connexions particularly with regard to north eastern Scotland which through his Gordon links remained central to the Byronic network throughout his life 136 Sea and swimming edit Byron enjoyed adventure especially relating to the sea 21 The first recorded notable example of open water swimming took place on 3 May 1810 when Lord Byron swam from Europe to Asia across the Hellespont Strait 137 This is often seen as the birth of the sport and pastime and to commemorate it the event is recreated every year as an open water swimming event 138 Whilst sailing from Genoa to Cephalonia in 1823 every day at noon Byron and Trelawny in calm weather jumped overboard for a swim without fear of sharks which were not unknown in those waters Once according to Trelawny they let the geese and ducks loose and followed them and the dogs into the water each with an arm in the ship Captain s new scarlet waistcoat to the annoyance of the Captain and the amusement of the crew 139 Fondness for animals edit Byron had a great love of animals most notably for a Newfoundland dog named Boatswain When the animal contracted rabies Byron nursed him albeit unsuccessfully without any thought or fear of becoming bitten and infected 140 141 Although deeply in debt at the time Byron commissioned an impressive marble funerary monument for Boatswain at Newstead Abbey larger than his own and the only building work that he ever carried out on his estate In his 1811 will Byron requested that he be buried with him 69 The 26 line poem Epitaph to a Dog has become one of his best known works But a draft of an 1830 letter by Hobhouse shows him to be the author Byron decided to use Hobhouse s lengthy epitaph instead of his own which read To mark a friend s remains these stones arise I never knew but one and here he lies 142 In a letter sent to Thomas Moore 143 Byron admitted to follow a diet inspired by Pythagoras who was a famous vegetarian Byron also kept a tame bear while he was a student at Trinity out of resentment for rules forbidding pet dogs like his beloved Boatswain There being no mention of bears in their statutes the college authorities had no legal basis for complaining Byron even suggested that he would apply for a college fellowship for the bear 144 During his lifetime in addition to numerous cats dogs and horses Byron kept a fox monkeys an eagle a crow a falcon peacocks guinea hens an Egyptian crane a badger geese a heron and a goat 145 Except for the horses they all resided indoors at his homes in England Switzerland Italy and Greece 2 Percy Shelley visiting Byron in Italy in 1821 described his menagerie 146 Lord B s establishment consists besides servants of ten horses eight enormous dogs three monkeys five cats an eagle a crow and a falcon and all these except the horses walk about the house which every now and then resounds with their unarbitrated quarrels as if they were the masters of it P S I find that my enumeration of the animals in this Circean Palace was defective I have just met on the grand staircase five peacocks two guinea hens and an Egyptian crane Percy Shelley Diary of Percy ShelleyHealth and appearance edit nbsp Byron in 1830Character and psyche edit I am such a strange melange of good and evil that it would be difficult to describe me 147 As a boy Byron s character is described as a mixture of affectionate sweetness and playfulness by which it was impossible not to be attached although he also exhibited silent rages moody sullenness and revenge with a precocious bent for attachment and obsession 116 Deformed foot edit From birth Byron had a deformity of his right foot Although it has generally been referred to as a club foot some modern medical authors maintain that it was a consequence of infantile paralysis poliomyelitis and others that it was a dysplasia a failure of the bones to form properly 148 Whatever the cause he was affected by a limp that caused him lifelong psychological and physical misery aggravated by painful and pointless medical treatment in his childhood and the nagging suspicion that with proper care it might have been cured 149 150 He was extremely self conscious about this from a young age nicknaming himself le diable boiteux 151 French for the limping devil after the nickname given to Asmodeus by Alain Rene Lesage in his 1707 novel of the same name Although he often wore specially made shoes in an attempt to hide the deformed foot 46 he refused to wear any type of brace that might improve the limp 21 Scottish novelist John Galt felt his oversensitivity to the innocent fault in his foot was unmanly and excessive because the limp was not greatly conspicuous He first met Byron on a voyage to Sardinia and did not realise he had any deficiency for several days and still could not tell at first if the lameness was a temporary injury or not At the time Galt met him he was an adult and had worked to develop a mode of walking across a room by which it was scarcely at all perceptible 23 The motion of the ship at sea may also have helped to create a favourable first impression and hide any deficiencies in his gait but Galt s biography is also described as being rather well meant than well written so Galt may be guilty of minimising a defect that was actually still noticeable 152 Physical appearance edit nbsp Lord Byron by Henry Pierce BoneByron s adult height was 5 feet 9 inches 1 75 m his weight fluctuating between 9 5 stone 133 lb 60 kg and 14 stone 200 lb 89 kg He was renowned for his personal beauty which he enhanced by wearing curl papers in his hair at night 153 He was athletic being a competent boxer and horse rider and an excellent swimmer He attended pugilistic tuition at the Bond Street rooms of former prizefighting champion Gentleman John Jackson whom Byron called the Emperor of Pugilism and recorded these sparring sessions in his letters and journals 154 Byron and other writers such as his friend Hobhouse described his eating habits in detail At the time he entered Cambridge he went on a strict diet to control his weight He also exercised a great deal and at that time wore a great many clothes to cause himself to perspire For most of his life he was a vegetarian and often lived for days on dry biscuits and white wine Occasionally he would eat large helpings of meat and desserts after which he would purge himself Although he is described by Galt and others as having a predilection for violent exercise Hobhouse suggests that the pain in his deformed foot made physical activity difficult and that his weight problem was the result 153 Trelawny who observed Byron s eating habits noted that he lived on a diet of biscuits and soda water for days at a time and then would eat a horrid mess of cold potatoes rice fish or greens deluged in vinegar and gobble it up like a famished dog 155 156 Political career editByron first took his seat in the House of Lords on 13 March 1809 157 but left London on 11 June 1809 for the Continent 158 Byron s association with the Holland House Whigs provided him with a discourse of liberty rooted in the Glorious Revolution of 1688 159 A strong advocate of social reform he received particular praise as one of the few Parliamentary defenders of the Luddites specifically he was against a death penalty for Luddite frame breakers in Nottinghamshire who destroyed textile machines that were putting them out of work His first speech before the Lords on 27 February 1812 was loaded with sarcastic references to the benefits of automation which he saw as producing inferior material as well as putting people out of work and concluded the proposed law was only missing two things to be effective Twelve Butchers for a Jury and a Jeffries for a Judge Byron s speech was officially recorded and printed in Hansard 160 He said later that he spoke very violent sentences with a sort of modest impudence and thought he came across as a bit theatrical 161 The full text of the speech which he had previously written out was presented to Dallas in manuscript form and he quotes it in his work 162 Two months later in conjunction with the other Whigs Byron made another impassioned speech before the House of Lords in support of Catholic emancipation 159 163 Byron expressed opposition to the established religion because it was unfair to people of other faiths 164 These experiences inspired Byron to write political poems such as Song for the Luddites 1816 and The Landlords Interest Canto XIV of The Age of Bronze 165 Examples of poems in which he attacked his political opponents include Wellington The Best of the Cut Throats 1819 and The Intellectual Eunuch Castlereagh 1818 166 Poetic works editByron wrote prolifically 167 In 1832 his publisher John Murray released the complete works in 14 duodecimo volumes including a life 161 by Thomas Moore Subsequent editions were released in 17 volumes first published a year later in 1833 An extensive collection of his works including early editions and annotated manuscripts is held within the John Murray Archive at the National Library of Scotland in Edinburgh Don Juan edit Main article Don Juan poem Byron s magnum opus Don Juan a poem spanning 17 cantos ranks as one of the most important long poems published in England since John Milton s Paradise Lost 168 Byron published the first two cantos anonymously in 1819 after disputes with his regular publisher over the shocking nature of the poetry By this time he had been a famous poet for seven years and when he self published the beginning cantos they were well received in some quarters The poem was then released volume by volume through his regular publishing house 47 By 1822 cautious acceptance by the public had turned to outrage and Byron s publisher refused to continue to publish the work In Canto III of Don Juan Byron expresses his detestation for poets such as William Wordsworth and Samuel Taylor Coleridge 47 169 In letters to Francis Hodgson Byron referred to Wordsworth as Turdsworth 170 Irish Avatar edit Main article Irish Avatar Byron wrote the satirical pamphlet Irish Avatar after the royal visit by King George IV to Ireland Byron criticised the attitudes displayed by the Irish people towards the Crown an institution he perceived as oppressing them and was dismayed by the positive reception George IV received during his visit In the pamphlet Byron lambasted Irish unionists and voiced muted support towards nationalistic sentiments in Ireland 171 Parthenon marbles editMain article Elgin Marbles Byron was a bitter opponent of Lord Elgin s removal of the Parthenon marbles from Athens and reacted with fury when Elgin s agent gave him a tour of the Parthenon during which he saw the spaces left by the missing part of the frieze and metopes He denounced Elgin s actions in his poem The Curse of Minerva and in Canto II stanzas XI XV of Childe Harold s Pilgrimage 172 Legacy and influence editMain article Byron s Memoirs nbsp Stained glass at Ottawa Public Library featuring Charles Dickens Archibald Lampman Sir Walter Scott Byron Alfred Lord Tennyson William Shakespeare and Thomas MooreByron s image as the personification of the Byronic hero fascinated the public and his wife Annabella coined the term Byromania to refer to the commotion surrounding him 46 His self awareness and personal promotion are seen as a beginning of what would become the modern rock star he would instruct artists painting portraits of him not to paint him with pen or book in hand but as a man of action 46 While Byron first welcomed fame he later turned from it by going into voluntary exile from Britain 35 Biographies were distorted by the burning of Byron s Memoirs in the offices of his publisher John Murray a month after his death and the suppression of details of Byron s bisexuality by subsequent heads of the firm which held the richest Byron archive As late as the 1950s scholar Leslie Marchand was expressly forbidden by the Murray company to reveal details of Byron s same sex passions 46 The re founding of the Byron Society in 1971 reflected the fascination that many people had with Byron and his work 173 This society became very active publishing an annual journal Thirty six Byron Societies function throughout the world and an International Conference takes place annually Byron exercised a marked influence on Continental literature and art and his reputation as a poet is higher in many European countries than in Britain 79 or America although not as high as in his time when he was widely thought to be the greatest poet in the world 35 Byron s writings also inspired many composers Over forty operas have been based on his works in addition to three operas about Byron himself including Virgil Thomson s Lord Byron His poetry was set to music by many Romantic composers including Beethoven Schubert Rossini Mendelssohn Schumann and Carl Loewe Among his greatest admirers was Hector Berlioz whose operas and Memoires reveal Byron s influence 174 In the twentieth century Arnold Schoenberg set Byron s Ode to Napoleon to music In April 2020 Byron was featured in a series of UK postage stamps issued by the Royal Mail to commemorate the Romantic poets on the 250th anniversary of the birth of William Wordsworth Ten 1st class stamps were issued of all the major British romantic poets and each stamp included an extract from one of their most popular and enduring works with Byron s She Walks in Beauty selected for the poet 175 Byronic hero edit The figure of the Byronic hero pervades much of his work and Byron himself is considered to epitomise many of the characteristics of this literary figure 46 The use of a Byronic hero by many authors and artists of the Romantic movement show Byron s influence during the 19th century and beyond including the Bronte sisters 46 176 His philosophy was more durably influential in continental Europe than in England Friedrich Nietzsche admired him and the Byronic hero was echoed in Nietzsche s Ubermensch or superman 177 Dimitrios Galanos in his funeral oration for Lord Byron glorified him by saying IMMORTAL BE THY MEMORY THOU DESERVEDLY BLESSED AND EVER TO BE REMEMBERED HERO published in BENGAL HURKARU Calcutta October 21 1824 1 The Byronic hero presents an idealised but flawed character whose attributes include great talent great passion a distaste for society and social institutions a lack of respect for rank and privilege although possessing both being thwarted in love by social constraint or death rebellion exile an unsavoury secret past arrogance overconfidence or lack of foresight and ultimately a self destructive manner These types of characters have since become ubiquitous in literature and politics In popular culture edit Main article Lord Byron in popular culture See also Cultural legacy of MazeppaBibliography edit nbsp The Bride of Abydos or Selim and Zuleika an 1857 painting by Eugene Delacroix depicting Byron s workThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Lord Byron news newspapers books scholar JSTOR January 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message See also Category Works by Lord Byron Index of Titles Index of First Lines Major works edit Hours of Idleness 1807 Lachin y Gair 1807 English Bards and Scotch Reviewers 1809 Childe Harold s Pilgrimage Cantos I amp II 1812 The Giaour 1813 text on Wikisource The Bride of Abydos 1813 The Corsair 1814 text on Wikisource Lara A Tale 1814 text on Wikisource Hebrew Melodies 1815 The Siege of Corinth 1816 text on Wikisource Parisina 1816 text on Wikisource The Prisoner of Chillon 1816 text on Wikisource The Dream 1816 text on Wikisource Prometheus 1816 text on Wikisource Darkness 1816 text on Wikisource Manfred 1817 text on Wikisource The Lament of Tasso 1817 Beppo 1818 text on Wikisource Childe Harold s Pilgrimage 1818 text on Wikisource Don Juan 1819 1824 incomplete on Byron s death in 1824 text on Wikisource Mazeppa 1819 The Prophecy of Dante 1819 Marino Faliero 1820 Sardanapalus 1821 The Two Foscari 1821 Cain 1821 The Vision of Judgment 1821 Heaven and Earth 1821 Werner 1822 The Age of Bronze 1823 The Island 1823 text on Wikisource The Deformed Transformed 1824 Letters and journals vol 1 1830 Letters and journals vol 2 1830 Selected shorter lyric poems edit Maid of Athens ere we part 1810 text on Wikisource And thou art dead 1812 text on Wikisource She Walks in Beauty 1814 text on Wikisource My Soul is Dark 1815 text on Wikisource The Destruction of Sennacherib 1815 text on Wikisource Monody on the Death of the Right Hon R B Sheridan 1816 text on Wikisource Fare Thee Well 1816 text on Wikisource So we ll go no more a roving 1817 text on Wikisource When We Two Parted 1817 text on Wikisource Ode on Venice 1819 text on Wikisource Stanzas 1819 Don Leon not by Lord Byron but attributed to him 1830s See also edit nbsp Biography portal nbsp Poetry portal nbsp Arts portalEarly life of Lord Byron Timeline of Lord Byron 19th century in poetry Bridge of Sighs a Venice landmark Byron denominated Asteroid 3306 ByronReferences edit a b c McGann Jerome 2004 Byron George Gordon Noel sixth Baron Byron 1788 1824 poet Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 4279 ISBN 9780198614128 Retrieved 8 February 2021 Subscription or UK public library membership required a b Lord Byron The British Library Retrieved 17 October 2020 Marchand Leslie A 15 April 2019 Lord Byron Lord Byron Biography Poems Don Juan Daughter amp Facts Encyclopaedia Britannica London Encyclopaedia Britannica Inc Byron and Scotland Robert Morrison com Lord Byron George Gordon Poetry Foundation 30 December 2018 Retrieved 30 December 2018 The Nation s Favourite Poet Result TS Eliot is your winner BBC Retrieved 25 May 2019 Poets Academy of American About George Gordon Byron Academy of American Poets poets org Retrieved 5 November 2022 Perrottet Tony 29 May 2011 Lake Geneva as Shelley and Byron Knew It The New York Times Byron had yet to die to make philhellenism generally acceptable Plomer 1970 Fuegi J Francis J October December 2003 Lovelace amp Babbage and the creation of the 1843 notes IEEE Annals of the History of Computing Washington DC IEEE Computer Society 25 4 16 26 doi 10 1109 MAHC 2003 1253887 Phillips Ana Lena November December 2011 Crowdsourcing Gender Equity Ada Lovelace Day and its companion website aims to raise the profile of women in science and technology American Scientist Research Triangle Park NC Xi Society 99 6 463 doi 10 1511 2011 93 463 Ada Lovelace honoured by Google doodle The Guardian London 10 December 2012 Retrieved 10 December 2012 Boase amp Courtney 1878 p 792 Brand 2020 p 183 Brand 2020 p 181 Brand 2020 pp 189 200 Brand 2020 p 212 a b c Galt 1830 Chapter 1 Brand 2020 p 221 Brand 2020 p 236 a b c d e f g h i j k l Byron as a Boy His Mother s Influence His School Days and Mary Chaworth PDF The New York Times 26 February 1898 Retrieved 11 July 2008 Brand 2020 p 254 a b Galt 1830 Chapter 3 George Gordon Byron MUZAFFAR UZ in Russian 22 January 2023 Retrieved 30 September 2023 George Gordon Byron s Poems with Analysis KeyToPoetry com keytopoetry com Retrieved 30 September 2023 a b c McGann 2013 a b c d e f g Cousin 1910 p 67 Williamson Martin 18 June 2005 The oldest fixture of them all the annual Eton vs Harrow match Cricinfo Magazine London Wisden Group Retrieved 23 July 2008 permanent dead link MacCarthy 2002 p 33 MacCarthy 2002 p 37 MacCarthy 2002 p 404 MacCarthy 2002 p 40 MacCarthy 2002 p 5 Byron post Noel George Gordon Baron Byron BRN805G A Cambridge Alumni Database University of Cambridge a b c Allen 2003 MacCarthy 2002 p 61 MacCarthy 2002 p 39 Fone Byrne 1998 The Columbia Anthology of Gay Literature Readings from Western Antiquity to the Present Day New York City Columbia University Press p 219 ISBN 978 0231096706 Lord Byron Biography A amp E Television Networks 2016 Fugitive Pieces Folcroft Library Editions December 1933 ISBN 9780841432437 Retrieved 29 September 2015 Lord Byron To Mary a b c d e f Hoeper Jeffrey D 17 December 2002 The Sodomizing Biographer Leslie Marchand s Portrait of Byron Arkansas State University Archived from the original on 10 May 2003 Retrieved 11 July 2008 Dallas 1824 p 18 Dallas 1824 p 46 Dallas 1824 p 55 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Bostridge Mark 3 November 2002 On the trail of the real Lord Byron The Independent on Sunday London Retrieved 22 July 2008 a b c Stabler 1999 Moore Thomas 2006 Letters and Journals of Lord Byron 1830 volume 1 In Ratcliffe Susan ed The Concise Oxford Dictionary of Quotations Oxford England Oxford University Press Lansdown 2012 Crompton 1985 pp 123 128 Blackstone 1974 Marchand p 45 Byron s correspondence and Journals from the Mediterranean July 1809 July 1811 Byron to Catherine Gordon Byron from Gibraltar 11 August 1809 I left Seville and rode on to Cadiz through a beautiful country at Xeres where the Sherry we drink is made I met a great merchant a Mr Gordon of Scotland who was extremely polite and favoured me with the Inspection of his vaults amp cellars so that I quaffed at the Fountain head Cadiz sweet Cadiz is the most delightful town I ever beheld a b Dauti Daut 30 January 2018 Britain the Albanian Question and the Demise of the Ottoman Empire 1876 1914 phd University of Leeds pp 29 30 Patane Vincenzo The Sour Fruit Lord Byron Love amp Sex John Cabot University Press 2018 p107 MacCarthy Fiona Byron Life and Legend John Murray London 2002 pp128 129 MacCarthy 2002 p 135 Tuite 2015 p 156 The Hellespont European Romanticisms in Association 23 April 2020 Lord Byron 19th century bad boy The British Library Retrieved 17 October 2020 Alexander Kilgour Anecdotes of Lord Byron From Authentic Sources with Remarks Illustrative of His Connection with the Principal Literary of the Present Day Knight and Lacey London 1925 Google Books pg 32 John Galt The Complete Works of Lord Byron Volume 2 Baudry s European Library 1837 Google Books cvii Rubin Merle 10 September 1989 A Hero to His Physician Lord Byron s Doctor by Paul West Los Angeles Times ISSN 0458 3035 Retrieved 26 December 2017 Silvia Bordoni 2005 Lord Byron and Germaine de Stael PDF University of Nottingham The Vampyre by John Polidori British Library Rigby Mair November 2004 Prey to some cureless disquiet Polidori s Queer Vampyre at the Margins of Romanticism Romanticism on the Net 36 37 doi 10 7202 011135ar John Polidori amp the Vampyre Byron www angelfire com Retrieved 26 December 2017 A Fragment from Mazeppa by Lord George Byron British Library a b c d e f g h i j k l Elze 1872 Byron George Gordon 1870 Lord Byron s Armenian exercises and poetry Duke University Libraries Venice In the island of S Lazzaro a b in Armenian Soghomonyan Soghomon A Բայրոն Ջորջ Նոել Գորդոն Byron George Noel Gordon Soviet Armenian Encyclopedia vol ii Yerevan Armenian SSR Armenian Academy of Sciences 1976 pp 266 267 Graziani Natale 1995 Letters Byron e Teresa L Amore Italiano Milan p 22 Letter to John Cam Hobhouse of Novembre 21 1819 Shelley Percy 1964 Letters Shelley in Italy Clarendon Press p 330 Moore Thomas Letters and Journals of Lord Byron London 1830 p 612 Lovell 1954 p 368 Prell Donald 2010 A Biography of Captain Daniel Roberts Palm Springs CA Strand Publishing p 66 Trelawny Edward Recollections of the last days of Shelley and Byron ed H Frowde 1906 p 88 a b c Cousin 1910 p 68 Marguerite Gardiner Countess of Blessington Orlando orlando cambridge org Retrieved 30 September 2023 Lovell 1954 p 369 a b Brewer 2011 p 197 Brewer 2011 pp 197 199 Prell 2009a Prell 2009b Brewer 2011 p 201 Brewer 2011 p 202 Brewer 2011 p 205 Brewer 2011 pp 207 208 a b Brewer 2011 p 212 a b c Brewer 2011 p 210 Brewer 2011 p 211 a b c Brewer 2011 p 213 a b Brewer 2011 p 215 Brewer 2011 pp 215 216 Brewer 2011 pp 216 217 Brewer 2011 p 216 Brewer 2011 p 217 a b c Brewer 2011 p 214 a b Neil Fraistat Steven E Jones November 2000 The Byron Chronology Romantic Circles University of Maryland Retrieved 15 May 2012 Brewer 2011 p 219 Brewer 2011 pp 215 219 Edgcumbe 1972 pp 185 190 Gamba 1975 Dionysios Solomos Eis to 8anato toy Lordoy Mpairon To the Death of Lord Byron in Greek Retrieved 20 November 2008 Heart Burial Time 31 July 1933 Archived from the original on 8 August 2013 Retrieved 20 November 2008 Mondragon Brenda Lord Byron Neurotic Poets C Retrieved 20 November 2008 Hibbert Christopher Weinreb Ben Keay Julia Keay John 2008 The London Encyclopaedia Macmillan p 342 ISBN 978 1 4050 4924 5 Wilson Scott Resting Places The Burial Sites of More Than 14 000 Famous Persons 3d ed 2 Kindle Locations 6724 6725 McFarland amp Company Inc Publishers Kindle Edition Pevsner 1951 p 85 Westminster Abbey Poets Corner Dean and Chapter of the Collegiate Church of St Peter Westminster Retrieved 31 May 2009 Westminster Abbey Lord Byron Dean and Chapter of the Collegiate Church of St Peter Westminster Retrieved 27 April 2016 Byron Monument for the Abbey Movement to Get Memorial in Poets Corner Is Begun PDF The New York Times 12 July 1907 Retrieved 11 July 2008 Ripley s Believe It or Not 3rd Series 1950 p xvi Martin Wainwright 18 October 2008 Greeks honour fallen hero Byron with a day of his own The Guardian Retrieved 4 May 2017 a b Moore Thomas The Works of Lord Byron With His Letters and Journals and His Life John Murray 1835 Marchand 1982 p 277 Marchand 1957 p 139 Marchand 1957 p 435 a b Marchand 1957 p 442 a b Emily A Bernhard Jackson Least Like Saints The Vexed Issue of Byron s Sexuality The Byron Journal 2010 38 1 pp 29 37 Crompton 1985 Crompton Louis 8 January 2007 Byron George Gordon Lord glbtq com Archived from the original on 11 April 2014 Retrieved 16 October 2011 Contrary to later misconception Byron was not killed in battle nor died from battle wounds See also The Dictionary of Misinformation 1975 by Tom Burname Futura Publications 1985 pp 39 40 a b Wong Ling Mei 14 October 2004 Professor to speak about his book Lady Caroline Lamb Spartan Daily San Jose State University Archived from the original on 7 December 2008 Retrieved 11 July 2008 a b Castle Terry 13 April 1997 Mad Bad and Dangerous to Know A biography that sees Lord Byron as a victim of circumstances The New York Times NYC USA Retrieved 19 November 2008 Ireland Poetic justice at home of Byron s exiled lover Sunday Times Property Dublin Ireland The Times Online 17 November 2002 Retrieved 21 February 2010 Mad bad and dangerous to know has become Lord Byron s lasting epitaph Lady Caroline Lamb coined the phrase after her first meeting with the poet at a society event in 1812 a b c d Lady Caroline Lamb Lord Byron s Lovers Retrieved 20 November 2008 Barger 2011 p 15 Marchand Byron s Letters and Journals 1982 Mystery of Byron an illegitimate child and Linby church Hucknall Dispatch 1 June 2010 Archived from the original on 24 June 2015 Ada Byron Lady Lovelace Retrieved 11 July 2010 Ada Lovelace Original and Visionary but No Programmer OpenMind 9 December 2015 Retrieved 3 April 2019 Pittock Murray Scotland The Global History 1603 to the Present Yale University Press 2022 p 13 Pittock Murray Scotland The Global History 1603 to the Present Yale University Press 2022 p 222 a b Pittock Murray Scotland The Global History 1603 to the Present Yale University Press 2022 p 223 Lord Byron swims the Hellespont History com 3 May 1810 Archived from the original on 6 March 2009 Retrieved 5 March 2012 Matt Barr 30 September 2007 The day I swam all the way to Asia The Guardian London Retrieved 5 March 2012 Prell 2009a p 13 Boatswain is dead He expired in a state of madness on the 10th after suffering much yet retaining all the gentleness of his nature to the last never attempting to do the least injury to anyone near him Marchand Leslie A ed Byron s Letters and Journals BLJ Johns Hopkins 2001 Letter to Francis Hodgson 18 November 1808 the poor animal having been seized with a fit of madness at the commencement of which so little aware was Lord Byron of the nature of the malady that more than once with his bare hand he wiped away the slaver from the dog s lips during the paroxysm Moore Thomas Letters and Journals of Lord Byron 1833 Moore Doris Langley The Late Lord Byron Melville House Publishing 1961 ch 10 Letter to Thomas Moore of January 28 1817 I have got a new friend the finest in the world a tame bear When I brought him here they asked me what I meant to do with him and my reply was he should sit for a fellowship Marchand Leslie A ed Byron s Letters and Journals BLJ Johns Hopkins 2001 Letter to Elizabeth Pigot 26 October 1807 BLJ I 135 6 Cochran 2011 pp 176 177 Francis Tiffany 21 April 2015 Bears badgers and Boatswain Lord Byron and his animals wordsworth org Marchand 1957 p 7 MacCarthy 2002 pp 3 4 Cousin 1910 p 66 Gilmour Ian 2003 The Making of the Poets Byron and Shelley in Their Time Carroll amp Graf Publishers p 35 For Byron his deformed foot became the crucial catastrophe of his life He saw it as the mark of satanic connection referring to himself as le diable boiteux the lame devil Eisler 1999 p 13 Henley William Ernest ed The works of Lord Byron Letters 1804 1813 Volume 1 1897 a b Baron 1997 David Snowdon Writing the Prizefight Pierce Egan s Boxiana World Bern 2013 Trelawny Edward John 2011 edition Recollections of the Last Days of Shelley and Byron Cambridge University Press p 48 ISBN 978 1 108 03405 0 Coghlan J Michelle 2020 The Cambridge Companion to Literature and Food Cambridge University Press p 53 ISBN 978 1108446105 Dallas 1824 p 33 Dallas 1824 p 65 a b Bone Drummond 2004 The Cambridge Companion to Byron Cambridge University Press pp 44 47 Byron s speech of 27 February 1812 in T C Hansard 1812 The Parliamentary Debates vol 21 pp 966 972 a b Moore Thomas 1829 1851 John Wilson Croker ed The Life of Lord Byron With His Letters and Journals Vol I John Murray pp 154 676 Retrieved 20 November 2008 Dallas 1824 p 205 Byron s speech of 21 April 1812 in T C Hansard 1812 The Parliamentary Debates vol 22 p 642 53 Byron s speech of 21 April 1812 in T C Hansard 1812 The Parliamentary Debates vol 22 p 679 Lord Byron April 1823 The Age of Bronze JGHawaii Publishing Co Retrieved 20 November 2008 Gordon George 26 May 2021 Don Juan Dedication List of Byron s works Archived from the original on 24 June 2019 Retrieved 20 November 2008 Lansdown 2012 p 129 Lord Byron Canto III XCIII XCIV Brown Mark 27 September 2009 Lord Byron s dig at William Turdsworth The Guardian Retrieved 2 July 2014 Moore Journals ed Dowden II 501 quoted Vail Jeffery 2001 The Literary Relationship of Lord Byron amp Thomas Moore Johns Hopkins University Press p 74 ISBN 9780801865008 Atwood 2006 p 136 The Byron Society Retrieved 29 January 2021 Warrack John 2001 Byron Lord In Sadie Stanley Tyrrell John eds The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians 2nd ed London Macmillan Publishers ISBN 978 1 56159 239 5 New stamps issued on 250th anniversary of William Wordsworth s birth ITV Retrieved 1 October 2022 Franklin 2013 pp 127 128 Russell 2004 pp 675 680 688 Bibliography edit Allen Brooke 2003 Byron revolutionary libertine and friend The Hudson Review 56 2 369 376 doi 10 2307 3853260 JSTOR 3853260 Atwood Roger 2006 Stealing History Tomb Raiders Smugglers And the Looting of the Ancient World New York St Martin s Press ISBN 0 312 32407 3 Barger Andrew 2011 BlooDeath The Best Vampire Short Stories 1800 1849 Collierville TN Bottletree Books ISBN 978 1 933747 35 4 Archived from the original on 15 August 2017 Retrieved 25 May 2013 Baron J H 1997 Illnesses and creativity Byron s appetites James Joyce s gut and Melba s meals and mesalliances British Medical Journal 315 7123 1697 1703 doi 10 1136 bmj 315 7123 1697 PMC 2128026 PMID 9448545 Blackstone Bernard 1974 Byron and Islam the triple Eros Journal of European Studies 4 4 325 363 doi 10 1177 004724417400400401 S2CID 162373838 Boase George Clement Courtney William Prideaux 1878 Bibliotheca Cornubiensis a Catalogue of the Writings of Cornishmen Vol II London Longmans Green Reader and Dyer Retrieved 19 November 2008 Bone Drummond 2004 The Cambridge Companion to Byron Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 78676 8 Brewer David 2011 The Greek War of Independence London Overlook Duckworth ISBN 9781585671724 Bullough Vern L 1990 History in Adult Human Sexual Behavior with Children and Adolescents in Western Societies In Jay R Felerman ed Pedophilia Biosocial Dimensions New York Springer Verlag pp 69 90 doi 10 1007 978 1 4613 9682 6 3 ISBN 9781461396840 Christensen Jerome 1993 Lord Byron s Strength Romantic Writing and Commercial Society Baltimore MD Johns Hopkins University Press ISBN 9780801843563 Cochran Peter ed 2010 Byron and Women and men Newcastle upon Tyne Cambridge Scholars Cochran Peter 2011 Byron and Italy Newcastle upon Tyne Cambridge Scholars ISBN 978 1 4438 3602 9 Crompton Louis 1985 Byron and Greek Love Homophobia in 19th Century England University of California Press ISBN 978 0 520 05172 0 Dallas Alexander Robert Charles 1824 Recollections of the life of Lord Byron from the year 1808 to the end of 1814 London Charles Knight Edgcumbe Richard 1972 Byron the Last Phase New York Haskell House Eisler Benita 1999 Byron Child of Passion Fool of Fame New York Alfred A Knopf ISBN 0 679 41299 9 Chapter one online at The New York Times Elwin Malcolm 1975 Lord Byron s Family Annabella Ada and Augusta 1816 1824 London John Murray Elwin Malcolm 1962 Lord Byron s Wife London Macdonald amp Co Elwin Malcolm 1967 The Noels and the Milbankes Their Letters for Twenty Five Years 1767 1792 London Macdonald amp Co Elze Karl Friedrich 1872 Lord Byron a Biography London John Murray Franklin Caroline 2013 The Female Romantics Nineteenth century Women Novelists and Byronism Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 99541 2 Galt John 1830 The Life of Lord Byron London Henry Colburn and Richard Bentley Gamba Pietro 1975 A Narrative of Lord Byron s Last Journey to Greece Extracted from the journal of Count Peter Gamba who attended his lordship on that expedition Folcroft Library Editions Grosskurth Phyllis 1997 Byron The Flawed Angel Hodder amp Stoughton Lansdown Richard 2012 The Cambridge Introduction to Byron Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 11133 1 Larman Alexander 2016 Byron s Women Head of Zeus ISBN 978 1784082024 Lovell Ernest J ed 1954 His Very Self and Voice Collected Conversations of Lord Byron New York MacMillan MacCarthy Fiona 2002 Byron Life and Legend John Murray ISBN 978 0 7195 5621 0 Marchand Leslie 1957 Byron A Life Alfred A Knopf Marchand Leslie A ed 1982 Lord Byron Selected Letters and Journals Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press ISBN 9780674539150 Mayne Ethel Colburn 1912 Byron Vol 1 C Scribner s sons McGann Jerome 2013 2004 Byron George Gordon Noel 1788 1824 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 4279 Subscription or UK public library membership required Moore Doris Langley 1974 Lord Byron Accounts Rendered London John Murray Moore Doris Langley 1961 The Late Lord Byron Posthumous Dramas London John Murray Parker Derek 1968 Byron and His World London Thames and Hudson Pevsner N 1951 Nottinghamshire Pevsner Architectural Guides Buildings of England Harmondsworth Penguin Plomer William 1970 1936 The Diamond of Jannina New York Taplinger Publishing ISBN 978 0 224 61721 5 Prell Donald B 2009a Sailing with Byron from Genoa to Cephalonia 1823 Palm Springs CA Strand Publishing ISBN 978 0 9741975 5 5 Prell Donald B 2009b Lord Byron Coincidence or Destiny Palm Springs CA Strand Publishing ISBN 978 0 9741975 6 2 Russell Bertrand 2004 1946 History of Western Philosophy Routledge Classics London Routledge ISBN 978 0415325059 Stabler Jane 1999 George Gordon Lord Byron Don Juan In Duncan Wu ed A Companion to Romanticism Blackwell pp 247 257 ISBN 978 0 631 21877 7 Taborski Boleslaw 1972 James Hogg ed Byron and the Theatre University of Salzburg Institut fur Englische Sprache und Literatur Volume 1 of Poetic drama amp poetic theory in Salzburg studies in English literature Tuite Clara 2015 Lord Byron and Scandalous Celebrity Cambridge Studies in Romanticism Vol 110 Cambridge UK Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 1 107 08259 5 Attribution nbsp Cousin John William 1910 Byron George Gordon 6th Lord Byron A Short Biographical Dictionary of English Literature London J M Dent amp Sons pp 66 68 via WikisourceFurther reading editAccardo Peter X Let Satire Be My Song Byron s English Bards and Scotch Reviewers Web exhibit Houghton Library Harvard University 2011 Brand Emily 2020 The Fall of the House of Byron Scandal and Seduction in Georgian England John Murray Press ISBN 9781473664319 Calder Angus 1984 Byron and Scotland in Hearn Sheila G ed Cencrastus No 15 New Year 1984 pp 21 24 ISSN 0264 0856 Calder Angus ed 1989 Byron and Scotland Radical or Dandy Edinburgh University Press ISBN 9780852246511 Drucker Peter Byron and Ottoman love Orientalism Europeanization and same sex sexualities in the early nineteenth century Levant Journal of European Studies vol 42 no 2 June 2012 140 57 Elfenbein Andrew Byron and the Victorians Studies in Nineteenth Century Literature and Culture Cambridge University Press 1995 ISBN 978 0 5214 5452 0 Garrett Martin George Gordon Lord Byron British Library Writers Lives London British Library 2000 ISBN 0 7123 4657 0 Garrett Martin Palgrave Literary Dictionary of Byron Palgrave 2010 ISBN 978 0 230 00897 7 Guiccioli Teresa contessa di Lord Byron s Life in Italy transl Michael Rees ed Peter Cochran 2005 ISBN 0 87413 716 0 Grosskurth Phyllis Byron The Flawed Angel Hodder 1997 ISBN 0 340 60753 X Marchand Leslie A editor Byron s Letters and Journals Harvard University Press Volume I In my hot youth 1798 1810 1973 Volume II Famous in my time 1810 1812 1973 Volume III Alas the love of women 1813 1814 1974 Volume IV Wedlock s the devil 1814 1815 1975 Volume V So late into the night 1816 1817 1976 Volume VI The flesh is frail 1818 1819 1976 Volume VII Between two worlds 1820 1978 Volume VIII Born for opposition 1821 1978 Volume IX In the wind s eye 1821 1822 1978 Volume X A heart for every fate 1822 1823 1980 Volume XI For freedom s battle 1823 1824 1981 Volume XII The trouble of an index index 1982 Lord Byron Selected Letters and Journals 1982 McGann Jerome Byron and Romanticism Cambridge Cambridge University Press 2002 ISBN 0 521 00722 4 Minto William 1878 Byron Lord Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol IV 9th ed pp 604 612 Oueijan Naji B A Compendium of Eastern Elements in Byron s Oriental Tales New York Peter Lang Publishing 1999 Patane Vincenzo L estate di un ghiro Il mito di Lord Byron attraverso la vita i viaggi gli amori e le opere Venezia Cicero 2013 ISBN 978 88 89632 39 0 Patane Vincenzo I frutti acerbi Lord Byron gli amori amp il sesso Venezia Cicero 2016 ISBN 978 88 89632 42 0 Patane Vincenzo The Sour Fruit Lord Byron Love amp Sex Lanham MD Rowman amp Littlefield copublished by John Cabot University Press Rome 2019 ISBN 978 1 61149 681 9 Raphael Frederic Byron Yale University Press 1982 ISBN 978 0 50001 278 9 Richardson Joanna Lord Byron and Some of His Contemporaries The Folio Society 1988 Rosen Fred Bentham Byron and Greece Clarendon Press Oxford 1992 ISBN 0 19 820078 1 Thiollet Jean Pierre Carre d Art Barbey d Aurevilly lord Byron Salvador Dali Jean Edern Hallier with texts by Anne Elisabeth Blateau and Francois Roboth fr Anagramme editions 2008 ISBN 978 2 35035 189 6 External links editThis article s use of external links may not follow Wikipedia s policies or guidelines Please improve this article by removing excessive or inappropriate external links and converting useful links where appropriate into footnote references June 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to George Gordon Byron nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Lord Byron nbsp Wikisource has original works by or about Lord Byron Works by Lord Byron at Project Gutenberg Works by or about Lord Byron at Internet Archive Works by Lord Byron at LibriVox public domain audiobooks nbsp Poems by Lord Byron at PoetryFoundation org The Byron Society The International Byron Society The Messolonghi Byron Society George Gordon Byron Collection at the Harry Ransom Center George Gordon Byron Collection at the New York Public Library George Gordon Byron Collection at the University of Leeds George Gordon Byron material at Drew University Byron Study Center at the University of Nottingham The Byron Chronology Byron s 1816 1824 letters to Murray and Moore about Armenian studies and translations Biography at the British Library The Life and Work of Lord Byron at EnglishHistory net Statue of Byron at Trinity College Cambridge Pictures of Byron s Walk Seaham County DurhamPeerage of EnglandPreceded byWilliam Byron Baron Byron1798 1824 Succeeded byGeorge Byron Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Lord Byron amp oldid 1196903291, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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