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George Gordon Byron [1788-1824] ENG
Ranked #26 in the top 380 poets
Votes 61%: 834 up, 527 down

Poems regarded shocking by early Victorians.

Often described as the most flamboyant and notorious of the major Romantics, Byron was both celebrated and castigated in life for his aristocratic excesses, including huge debts, numerous love affairs – with men as well as women, as well as rumours of a scandalous liaison with his half-sister – and self-imposed exile.

George Gordon Byron  quote `I can never get people to understand that poetry is the expression of excited passion, and that there is no such thing as a life of passion any more than a continuous earthquake, or an eternal fever.` 

	788(From letter to Moore, July 5, 1821)

	George Gordon Byron ( Jan. 22, 1788, London, -- April 19, 1824, Missolonghi, Greece) was the son of Captain John "Mad Jack" Byron and his second wife, Catherine Gordon of Gight, a Scots heiress. After her husband had squandered most of her fortune, Mrs. Byron took her infant son to Aberdeen, where they lived in lodgings on a meagre income. The captain died in France in 1791. His son, George Gordon Byron, had been born with a clubfoot and early developed an extreme sensitivity to his lameness. In 1798, at age 10, he unexpectedly inherited the title and estates of his great-uncle William, the 5th Baron Byron. His mother proudly took him to England, where the boy fell in love with the ghostly halls and spacious ruins of Newstead Abbey, which had been presented to the Byrons by Henry VIII.

	After living at Newstead for a while, Byron was sent to school in London, and in 1801 he went to Harrow, one of England`s most prestigious schools. In 1805 Byron entered Trinity College, Cambridge. In 1806 Byron had his early poems privately printed in a volume entitled Fugitive Pieces, and that same year he formed at Trinity what was to be a lifelong friendship with John Hobhouse, who stirred his interest in liberal Whiggism.

	Byron`s first published volume of poetry, Hours of Idleness, appeared in 1807. A sarcastic critique of the book in The Edinburgh Review provoked his retaliation in 1809 with a couplet satire, English Bards and Scotch Reviewers,in which he attacked the contemporary literary scene. This work gained him his first recognition.

	On reaching his majority in 1809, Byron took his seat in the House of Lords, and then embarked with Hobhouse on a grand tour. They sailed to Lisbon, crossed Spain, and proceeded by Gibraltar and Malta to Greece, and to Tepelene in Albania. In Greece Byron began Childe Harolde`s Pilgrimage, which he continued in Athens.

	Byron arrived back in London in July 1811, but his mother died before he could reach her at Newstead. At the beginning of March, the first two cantos of Childe Harold`s Pilgrimage were published by John Murray and Byron "woke to find himself famous."

	During the summer of 1813, Byron apparently entered into intimate relations with his half sister Augusta, now married to Colonel George Leigh. He then carried on a flirtation with Lady Frances Webster as a diversion from this dangerous liaison. Seeking to escape his love affairs in marriage, Byron proposed in September 1814 to Anne Isabella (Annabella) Milbanke. The marriage took place in January 1815, and Lady Byron gave birth to a daughter, Augusta Ada, in December 1815. From the start the marriage was doomed by the gulf between Byron and his unimaginative and humorless wife; and in January 1816 Annabella left Byron to live with her parents. Byron went abroad in April 1816, never to return to England.

	Byron sailed up the Rhine River into Switzerland and settled at Geneva, near Percy Bysshe Shelley and Mary Godwin, who had eloped, and Godwin`s stepdaughter by a second marriage, Claire Clairmont, with whom Byron had begun an affair in England. There he wrote the third canto of Childe Harold (1816). At the end of the summer the Shelley party left for England, where Claire gave birth to Byron`s illegitimate daughter Allegra in January 1817. In October Byron and Hobhouse departed for Italy.

	In the light, mock-heroic style of Beppo; Byron found the form in which he would write his greatest poem, Don Juan, a satire in the form of a picaresque verse tale. The first two cantos of Don Juan were begun in 1818 and published in July 1819. Meeting with Countess Teresa Gamba Guiccioli, who was only 19 years old and married to a man nearly three times her age, re-energized Byron and changed the course of his life. Byron followed Countess Teresa to Ravenna, and she later accompanied him back to Venice. He won the friendship of her father and brother, Counts Ruggero and Pietro Gamba, who initiated him into the secret society of the Carbonari and its revolutionary aims to free Italy from Austrian rule.

	He arrived in Pisa in November 1821, having followed Teresa and the Counts Gamba there after the latter had been expelled from Ravenna for taking part in an abortive uprising. But by 1823 Byron was becoming bored with the domesticity of life with Teresa, and in April 1823 he agreed to act as agent of the London Committee, which had been formed to aid the Greeks in their struggle for independence from the Turks. In July 1823 Byron left Genoa for Cephalonia.

	But a serious illness in February 1824 weakened him, and in April he contracted the fever from which he died at Missolonghi on April 19. Deeply mourned, he became a symbol of disinterested patriotism and a Greek national hero. His body was brought back to England and, refused burial in Westminster Abbey, was placed in the family vault near Newstead. But,145 years after his death, a memorial to Byron was finally placed on the floor of the Abbey.

Bipolar disorder, Dark romanticism, Libertine, Romanticism, Slavery

YearsCountryPoetInteraction
1688-1744
ENG
Alexander Pope
→ influenced George Gordon Byron
1779-1852
IRL
Thomas Moore
→ friend of George Gordon Byron
1552-1599
ENG
Edmund Spenser
← praised by George Gordon Byron
1631-1700
ENG
John Dryden
← praised by George Gordon Byron
1770-1850
ENG
William Wordsworth
← disliked by George Gordon Byron
1772-1834
ENG
Samuel Taylor Coleridge
← disliked by George Gordon Byron
1774-1843
ENG
Robert Southey
← disliked by George Gordon Byron
1784-1859
ENG
James Henry Leigh Hunt
← friend of George Gordon Byron
1792-1822
ENG
Percy Bysshe Shelley
← influenced by George Gordon Byron
1814-1841
RUS
Mikhail Lermontov
← influenced by George Gordon Byron
1816-1855
ENG
Charlotte Bronte
← influenced by George Gordon Byron
1818-1848
ENG
Emily Jane Bronte
← influenced by George Gordon Byron
1819-1891
USA
Herman Melville
← influenced by George Gordon Byron
1820-1849
ENG
Anne Bronte
← influenced by George Gordon Byron
1828-1882
ENG
Dante Gabriel Rossetti
← influenced by George Gordon Byron
1888-1935
POR
Fernando Pessoa
← influenced by George Gordon Byron


WorkLangRating
When We Two Parted
eng
113
She Walks In Beauty
eng
105
There Is Pleasure In The Pathless Woods
eng
101
Darkness
eng
19
So We`ll Go No More A-Roving
eng
14
The Dark, Blue Sea
eng
9
Stanzas For Music: They Say That Hope Is Happiness
eng
8
Adieu, Adieu! My Native Shore
eng
6
On This Day I Complete My Thirty-Sixth Year
eng
6
The Destruction Of Sennacherib
eng
6
A Spirit Passed Before Me [From Job]
eng
5
Away, Away, Ye Notes Of Woe!
eng
5
Childe Harold`s Pilgrimage: A Romaunt. Canto IV.
eng
5
Euthanasia
eng
5
The Prisoner Of Chillon
eng
5
`All Is Vanity, Saieth the Preacher`
eng
5
And Wilt Thou Weep When I Am Low?
eng
4
I Speak Not, I Trace Not, I Breathe Not Thy Name
eng
4
Maid Of Athens, Ere We Part
eng
4
My Soul Is Dark
eng
3
On The Death Of A Young Lady
eng
3
Remember Thee! Remember Thee!
eng
3
The Eve Of Waterloo
eng
3
A Riddle, On The Letter E
eng
2
Bright Be The Place Of Thy Soul!
eng
2
Childe Harold`s Pilgrimage: A Romaunt. Canto III.
eng
2
Dear Doctor, I have Read your Play
eng
2
Fare Thee Well
eng
2
Francisca
eng
2
Imitated From Catullus: To Ellen
eng
2
Lines Inscribed Upon A Cup Formed From A Skull
eng
2
Lines Written Beneath An Elm In The Churchyard Of Harrow On The Hill, Sept. 2, 1807
eng
2
Love`s Last Adieu
eng
2
Oh! snatched away in beauty`s bloom
eng
2
One Struggle More, And I Am Free
eng
2
Solitude
eng
2
Sonnet, To The Same (Genevra)
eng
2
Stanzas For Music: There Be None Of Beauty`s Daughters
eng
2
Stanzas To A Lady, On Leaving England
eng
2
Stanzas To Augusta (II.)
eng
2
Sun Of The Sleepless!
eng
2
The First Kiss Of Love
eng
2
The Siege Of Corinth
eng
2
The Tear
eng
2
To Time
eng
2
Childe Harold`s Pilgrimage: A Romaunt. Canto II.
eng
1
Damaetas
eng
1
Don Juan: Canto The Twelfth
eng
1
Epitaph On A Beloved Friend
eng
1
I Would I Were A Careless Child
eng
1
Lines To A Lady Weeping
eng
1
Oh! Weep For Those
eng
1
On A Cornelian Heart Which Was Broken
eng
1
On Being Asked What Was The `Origin Of Love`
eng
1
Reply To Some Verses Of J.M.B. Pigot, Esq. On The Cruelty Of His Mistress
eng
1
Stanzas
eng
1
Stanzas Composed During A Thunderstorm
eng
1
Stanzas For Music: There`s Not A Joy The World Can Give
eng
1
Stanzas To A Hindoo Air
eng
1
Stanzas To The Po
eng
1
Stanzas Written On The Road Between Florence And Pisa
eng
1
The Chain I Gave: From The Turkish
eng
1
The Conquest
eng
1
The Dream
eng
1
Thou Art Not False, But Thou Art Fickle
eng
1
To A Beautiful Quaker
eng
1
To Caroline
eng
1
To Caroline: Oh When Shall The Grave Hide
eng
1
To Eliza
eng
1
To M. S. G.
eng
1
To M. S. G. : When I Dream That You Love Me
eng
1
To Mary, On Receiving Her Picture
eng
1
To The Countess Of Blessington
eng
1
Translation Of A Romaic Love Song
eng
1
Were My Bosom As False as Thou Deem`st It To Be
eng
1
Written After Swimming From Sestos To Abydos
eng
1
A Fragment: When, To Their Airy Hall
eng
0
A Sketch
eng
0
A Very Mournful Ballad On The Siege And Conquest Of Alhama
eng
0
Address, Spoken At The Opening Of Drury-Lane Theatre. Saturday, October 10, 1812
eng
0
Adrian`s Address To His Soul When Dying
eng
0
Aholibamah`s Monologue
eng
0
An Occasional Prologue, Delivered Previous To The Performance Of `The Wheel Of Fortune` At A Private
eng
0
Answer To A Beautiful Poem, Entitled `The Common Lot`
eng
0
Answer To Some Elegant Verses Sent By A Friend To The Author, Complaining That One Of His Descriptio
eng
0
Beppo, A Venetian Story
eng
0
Bowles And Campbell
eng
0
Childe Harold`s Pilgrimage: A Romaunt. Canto I.
eng
0
Childish Recollections
eng
0
Churchill`s Grave: A Fact Literally Rendered
eng
0
Condolatory Address To Sarah, Countess Of Jersey, On The Prince Regent`s Returning Her Picture To Mr
eng
0
Damætas
eng
0
Defeated Yet Triumphant
eng
0
Don Juan: Canto The Eighth
eng
0
Don Juan: Canto The Eleventh
eng
0
Don Juan: Canto The Fifteenth
eng
0
Don Juan: Canto The Fifth
eng
0
Don Juan: Canto The First
eng
0
Don Juan: Canto The Fourteenth
eng
0
Don Juan: Canto The Fourth
eng
0
Don Juan: Canto The Ninth
eng
0
Don Juan: Canto The Second
eng
0
Don Juan: Canto The Seventeenth
eng
0
Don Juan: Canto The Seventh
eng
0
Don Juan: Canto The Sixteenth
eng
0
Don Juan: Canto The Sixth
eng
0
Don Juan: Canto The Tenth
eng
0
Don Juan: Canto The Third
eng
0
Don Juan: Canto The Thirteenth
eng
0
Don Juan: Dedication
eng
0
Elegiac Stanzas On The Death Of Sir Peter Parker, Bart.
eng
0
Elegy On Newstead Abbey
eng
0
Endorsement To The Deed Of Separation In The April Of 1816
eng
0
English Bards and Scotch Reviewers: A Satire
eng
0
Epigram
eng
0
Epigram On My Wedding- Day To Penelope
eng
0
Epigram, On The Braziers` Company Having Resolved To Present An Address To Queen Caroline
eng
0
Epigram: From The French Of Rulhières
eng
0
Epigram: The World Is A Bundle Of Hay
eng
0
Epigrams
eng
0
Epistle From Mr. Murray To Dr. Polidori
eng
0
Epistle To A Friend, In Answer To Some Lines Exhorting The Author To Be Cheerful, And To Banish Care
eng
0
Epistle To Augusta
eng
0
Epistle To Mr. Murray
eng
0
Epitaph
eng
0
Epitaph For Joseph Blackett, Late Poet And Shoemaker
eng
0
Epitaph For William Pitt
eng
0
Epitaph On John Adams, Of Southwell - A Carrier, Who Died Of Drunkenness
eng
0
Farewell To Malta
eng
0
Farewell To The Muse
eng
0
Farewell! If Ever Fondest Prayer
eng
0
Fill The Goblet Again: A Song
eng
0
Fragment Of An Epistle To Thomas Moore
eng
0
From Anacreon
eng
0
From Anacreon: `Twas Now The Hour When Night Had Driven
eng
0
From The French
eng
0
From The Last Hill That Looks On Thy Once Holy Dome
eng
0
From The Portuguese, `Tu Mi Chamas`
eng
0
From The Prometheus Vinctus Of Aeschylus
eng
0
Granta: A Medley
eng
0
Herod`s Lament For Mariamne
eng
0
I Saw Thee Weep
eng
0
I Would To Heaven That I Were So Much Clay
eng
0
If Sometimes In The Haunts Of Men
eng
0
If That High World
eng
0
Imitation Of Tibullus
eng
0
Impromptu
eng
0
Impromptu, In Reply To A Friend
eng
0
Impromptus
eng
0
In The Valley Of The Waters
eng
0
Inscription On The Monument Of A Newfoundland Dog
eng
0
It Is The Hour
eng
0
Jeptha`s Daughter
eng
0
John Keats,
eng
0
Lachin Y Gair
eng
0
Lara. A Tale
eng
0
Lines Addressed To A Young Lady
eng
0
Lines Addressed To The Rev. J. T. Becher, On His Advising The Author To Mix More With Society
eng
0
Lines In The Travellers` Book At Orchomenus
eng
0
Lines On Hearing That Lady Byron Was Ill
eng
0
Lines On Mr. Hodgson Written On Board The Lisbon Packet
eng
0
Lines Written Beneath A Picture
eng
0
Lines Written In An Album, At Malta
eng
0
Lines Written On A Blank Leaf Of `The Pleasures Of Memory`
eng
0
Lines: Written In `Letters Of An Italian Nun And An English Gentleman`
eng
0
L`Amitté Est L`Amour
eng
0
Manfred: A Dramatic Poem. Act I.
eng
0
Manfred: A Dramatic Poem. Act II.
eng
0
Manfred: A Dramatic Poem. Act III.
eng
0
Martial, Lib. I, Epig. I.
eng
0
Mazeppa
eng
0
Monody On The Death Of The Right Hon. R. B. Sheridan
eng
0
My Epitaph
eng
0
Napoleon`s Farewell (From The French)
eng
0
Ode (From The French)
eng
0
Ode On Venice
eng
0
Ode To Napoleon Buonaparte
eng
0
On A Change Of Masters At A Great Public School
eng
0
On A Distant View Of The Village And School Of The Harrow Hill
eng
0
On A Nun
eng
0
On Finding A Fan
eng
0
On Jordan`s Banks
eng
0
On Leaving Newstead Abbey
eng
0
On Lord Thurlow`s Poems
eng
0
On Moore`s Last Operatic Farce, Or Farcical Opera
eng
0
On My Thirty-Third Birthday, January 22, 1821
eng
0
On My Wedding-Day
eng
0
On Napoleon`s Escape From Elba
eng
0
On Parting
eng
0
On Revisiting Harrow
eng
0
On The Birth Of John William Rizzo Hoppner
eng
0
On The Bust Of Helen By Canova
eng
0
On The Castle Of Chillon
eng
0
On The Day Of The Destruction Of Jerusalem By Titus
eng
0
On The Death Of Mr. Fox
eng
0
On The Star Of `The Legion Of Honour` (From The French)
eng
0
Oscar Of Alva: A Tale
eng
0
Parisina
eng
0
Prometheus
eng
0
Remember Him, Whom Passion`s Power
eng
0
Remembrance
eng
0
Remind Me Not, Remind Me Not
eng
0
Saul
eng
0
Song For The Luddites
eng
0
Song Of Saul, Before His Last Battle
eng
0
Sonnet To George The Fourth, On The Repeal Of Lord Edward Fitzgerald`s Forfeiture
eng
0
Sonnet To Lake Leman
eng
0
Sonnet, To Genevra
eng
0
Stanzas Composed During A Thunder-storm
eng
0
Stanzas To A Lady, With The Poems Of Camoëns
eng
0
Stanzas To Augusta
eng
0
Stanzas To Jessy
eng
0
Stanzas Written In Passing The Ambracian Gulf
eng
0
Stanzas: When A Man Hath No Freedom
eng
0
Substitute For An Epitaph
eng
0
The Adieu
eng
0
The Bride Of Abydos
eng
0
The Charity Ball
eng
0
The Cornelian
eng
0
The Corsair
eng
0
The Devil`s Drive: An Unfinished Rhapsody
eng
0
The Episode Of Nisus And Euryalus
eng
0
The Giaour: A Fragment Of A Turkish Tale
eng
0
The Harp The Monarch Minstrel Swept
eng
0
The Irish Avatar
eng
0
The Island: Canto I.
eng
0
The Island: Canto II.
eng
0
The Island: Canto III.
eng
0
The Island: Canto IV.
eng
0
The Isles Of Greece
eng
0
The Lament Of Tasso
eng
0
The Prayer Of Nature
eng
0
The Spell Is Broke, The Charm Is Flown!
eng
0
The Vision Of Judgment
eng
0
The Wild Gazelle
eng
0
There Was A Time, I Need Not Name
eng
0
Thoughts Suggested By A College Examination
eng
0
Thy Day`s are Done
eng
0
To A Lady
eng
0
To A Lady, On Being Asked My Reasons For Quitting England In The Spring
eng
0
To A Lady, Who Presented The Author With The Velvet Band Which Bound Her Tresses
eng
0
To A Lady, Who Presented To The Author A Lock Of Hair Braided With His Own, And Appointed A Night In
eng
0
To A Vain Lady
eng
0
To A Youthful Friend
eng
0
To An Oak At Newstead
eng
0
To Anne
eng
0
To Anne: Oh, Say Not, Sweet Anne
eng
0
To Belshazzar
eng
0
To Caroline: When I Hear That You Express An Affection So Warm
eng
0
To D--
eng
0
To Dives. A Fragment
eng
0
To E---
eng
0
To Edward Noel Long, Esq.
eng
0
To Emma
eng
0
To Florence
eng
0
To George, Earl Delwarr
eng
0
To Lesbia
eng
0
To Lord Thurlow
eng
0
To M--
eng
0
To Marion
eng
0
To Mr. Murray
eng
0
To Mr. Murray (For Oxford And For Waldegrave)
eng
0
To Mr. Murray (Strahan, Tonson Lintot Of The Times)
eng
0
To My Son
eng
0
To Romance
eng
0
To The Author Of A Sonnet, Beginning, `"Sad Is My Verse," You Say, "And Yet No Tear"`
eng
0
To The Duke Of Dorset
eng
0
To The Earl Of Clare
eng
0
To The Sighing Strephon
eng
0
To Thomas Moore
eng
0
To Thomas Moore (My Boat Is On The Shore)
eng
0
To Thomas Moore : Written The Evening Before His Visit To Mr. Leigh Hunt In Horsemonger Lane Gaol, M
eng
0
To Thyrza
eng
0
To Thyrza: And Thou Art Dead, As Young And Fair
eng
0
To Woman
eng
0
To-- : From The French
eng
0
Translation From Catullus
eng
0
Translation From Horace
eng
0
Translation From The Medea Of Euripides
eng
0
Translation Of The Epitaph On Virgil And Tibullus By Domitius Marsus
eng
0
Translation Of The Famous Greek War Song
eng
0
Translation Of The Nurse`s Dole In The Medea Of Euripides
eng
0
Translation Of The Romaic Song
eng
0
Verses Found In A Summerhouse At Hales-Owen
eng
0
Versicles
eng
0
Vision of Belshazzar
eng
0
We Sate Down And Wept By The Waters
eng
0
Well! Thou Art Happy
eng
0
When Coldness Wraps This Suffering Clay
eng
0
When I Roved A Young Highlander
eng
0
Windsor Poetics : Lines Composed On The Occasion Of His Royal Highness The Prince Regent Being Seen
eng
0
Written Shortly After The Marriage Of Miss Chaworth
eng
0

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