Born George Gordon, Lord Byron was born on January 22nd, 1788 in London. He was known as the most flamboyant and notorious of the romantics in his era. His father, Captain John (Mad Jack) Byron was absent for most of his son’s life and in turn caused a bitter and angry teenage George. Byron was born with a clubbed right foot, causing him to be self conscious throughout his life. As a boy, young George endured an absentee father, an abusive nurse, and an unstable mother. In the summer of 1789, Byron moved with his mother to Aberdeen. His mother was emotionally unstable and erratic. She raised him in an atmosphere filled with her temper, extreme insensitivity and excessive tenderness. She did not do much to help her son’s deformation, but more so mocked it. In 1798, his great-uncle the fifth Lord Byron passed on, allowing George to take the spot as the sixth Baron Byron of Rochdale. He took much pride in his coat of arms and his nobleman status. He fell deeply in love with his cousin, Margaret Parker in 1800, and when she died two years later, it inspired his first real dive into the poetry realm. He composed “On the Death of a Young Lady”. Throughout his life, his poetry would serve as a catharsis of extreme deep emotion. He then attended Harrow from 1801 to 1805, while attending he excelled in oratory and even played sports such as cricket. This is where he formed passionate and sexual relationships with other young men. Shortly after he fell in love with a distant cousin named Mary Chaworth of Annesley Hall, he had been so infatuated with her that he moved to be near her. His unrequited passion for her found expression in such poems as “Hills of Annesley”, “The Adieu”, “Stanzas to a Lady on Leaving England”, and ...
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...te Byron had superb force; his letters prove it. He had in many ways a very fine nature too; though as no one laughed him out of his affectations he became more like Horace Cole than one could wish. He could only be laughed at by a woman, and they worshipped instead. I haven't yet come to Lady Byron, but I suppose, instead of laughing, she merely disapproved. And so he became Byronic.”(3) She says she is “much impressed at the badness of Byron’s poetry”. John Murray described him as being “Wild, audacious, rebellious, half mad by nature; a creature made to tempt and to be tempted, to seduce and to fall, about whom there was but one certainty, that he was irreclaimable.” As you can see the opinions are endless on this truly unique character known as George Gordon Byron, but none can dismiss the incredible, lasting influence he has had on the literary world.
middle of paper ... ... “Lord Byron was with a lady” “huh”. She also shows her interest in fashionable things such as waltzes, which are a sign of maturity and that she is growing into a woman.
“Victorian poets illustrated the changeable nature of attitudes and values within their world and explored the experiences of humanity through these shifts.”
As a boy he had received a basic education at a small grammar school before being schooled in full by his father. At even a young age Tennyson loved to read and write it did not take him long to discover his love of poetry. Tennyson also went on to attend Trinity College, which is where he met Arthur Hallam. Arthur went on to become Tennyson’s closest and most trusted friend. It was at this time he began to publish his own poetry. However not long after in 1831 his father died which caused his family to be thrown into financial difficulties, and as a result he was not able to finish his degree. However, the family loss that he suffered the most from was the loss of three of his younger brothers to mental institution. Yet still troubles plagued him when two years later in 1833 Hallam died from a stroke. The losses Tennyson endured were the chief reason why so much of his poetry revolves around his take on death and loss. Perhaps the most famous example of which is the volume of poems titled “In Memoriam” which was published in 1850 which encompassed Tennyson’s sorrow at the loss of his friend. As time went on his poetry became increasingly well known and appreciated, as a result he became incredibly wealthy and was able to marry Emily Sherwood in the the same year “In Memoriam” was published. His talent with the pen even went as far as to put him on friendly terms with Queen
Harris, Laurie Lanzen. “George Gordon (Noel) Byron, Lord Byron.” Nineteenth- Century Literature Criticism. Vol. 2. Detroit: Gale Research Company, 1982. Print.
He was the leader or the romantic revolution and was celebrity in his time. His poem that made him well know was Childe Harold's Pilgrimage.
Poems by Walt Whitman and Hanshan feature strong enlightenment ideals and prevalent references to nature as a way to achieve these ideals. Though the two men lived in very different times, their works carry similar messages. Following the path to enlightenment generally refers to the Buddhist Eightfold Path, though it has been adapted over time to refer to the state of understanding a person reaches, both of oneself and his or her surroundings, as well as of that beyond what can be sensed. Relying solely on one’s talents and denying society and worldly possessions are typically seen as characteristics of an enlightened person, as seen in the writings of both Whitman and Hanshan.
the “wet, ungenial summer” and “incessant rain” of their stay with Lord Byron at Villa
Literature is filled with the rise and fall of heroes, of civilizations, of men in general. The Romantic Era in England turned out works that dealt specifically with the rise and fall of the human spirit. Writers examined what makes us thrive as humans, and similarly what makes us fail. Such works commonly contain the theme of spiritual or social atrophy, and because the Industrial Revolution was in full swing at the time, these works often address the modern human break with the natural world. The question posed is this: Have we as humans sold out, and can we be saved from our own destruction? Works by Mary Shelley, William Wordsworth and Lord Byron demonstrate the atrophy of humanity, but all three works present a solution for redemption.
Lord Byron had a variety of achievements during his time. Among these various achievements, he had a very significant and profound impact on the nineteenth century and it’s “conception of archetypal Romantic Sensibility. (Snyder 40). “What fascinates nineteenth century audiences about Byron was not simply the larger than life character of the man transmuted into...
Two Romanticism poets that stand out are George Gordon, known as Lord Byron, and William Blake. According to The Norton Anthology Western Literature, Lord Byron cultivated the persona of the solitary sufferer as well as the dashing adventurer. These two concepts are seen in majority of his works. He did not limit himself to only poetry. Lord Byron wrote many lyrics, oriental tales, satires, and melancholy poems. In his lifetime he was able to attract many readers as he engaged in Romantic Ideology.
A study of William Butler Yeats is not complete without a study of William Blake, just as a study of Blake is greatly aided by a study of Yeats. The two poets are inexorably tied together. Yeats, aided by his study of Blake, was able to find a clearer poetic voice. Yeats had a respect for and an understanding of Blake's work that was in Yeats' time without parallel. Yeats first read Blake at the age of 15 or 16 when his father gave him Blake to read. Yeats writes in his essay "William Blake and the Imagination" that "...when one reads Blake, it is as though the spray of an inexhaustible fountain of beauty was blown into our faces (Yeats, Essays xxx)." Yeats believed Blake to be a genius and he never wavered in his opinion. It is his respect for Blake that caused him to study and emulate Blake. He tried to tie Blake closer to himself by stressing Blake's rumored Irish ancestry. He strove to understand Blake more clearly than anyone had before him, and he succeeded. As with other pursuits Yeats held nothing back. He immersed himself fully in Blake's writings. As with many of his mental pursuits he deepened his understanding of the subject by writing about it.
The great poet, Oscar Wilde once said “Life imitates art far more than art imitates Life.” These words ring true even to this day. Many of our heroes and idols attain inspiration from their every day life, yet their achievements are often oveshadowed by the myth created behind their personas. Therefore, it is natural for the curious listener to question wether what has been heard is truth or glamorization to further bolster their fame. So the question begging to be answered is, Does an individuals life and era truly influence his or her work? Does it justify their status or legend? The reality of these questions tend to be stranger than fiction, for there is always an underlied truth behind the works of even the most famous individual. George Gordon Byron, Lord Byron is certainly a man who lived up to these questions. He was regarded as "one of the greatest English poets and the very prototype literary Romanticism." His temperament was volatile yet always had an air of social civility which intriguied anyone who came across him. Always the charmer, his magnetic personality attracted women and men alike. He looked at life in a light and cheerful manner but was prone to spells of severe depression, hence he was well aware of his paradoxical contradictions for he famously told his friend Lady Blessington "'I am so changeable, being everything by turns and nothing long- I am such a strange melange of good and evil, that it would be difficult to describe me."' His works where intensely personal. Usually filled with autobiograpgical references combined with a larger sense of the worlds situation. Thus, Byron made his internal journey either a reflection or reaction of his lifes' circumstances.
Elizabeth Barrett Browning was one of the braver literary pioneers. Choosing to utilize the vocabulary she favored rather than submit to the harsh criticisms of those who held the power to make or break her is an applaudable novelty about her. Many writers, having been successful in their literary exploits, are susceptible to accusations that their work was catered to critics. Surely, this cannot and should not be said of Elizabeth Barrett Browning.
William Wordsworth is a British poet who is associated with the Romantic movement of the early 19th century. Wordsworth was born on April 7, 1770, in Cockermouth, Cumberland, England. Wordsworth’s mother died when he was seven years old, and he was an orphan at 13. This experience shapes much of his later work. Despite Wordsworth’s losses, he did well at Hawkshead Grammar School, where he firmly established his love of poetry. After Hawkshead, Wordsworth studied at St. John’s College in Cambridge and before his final semester, he set out on a walking tour of Europe, an experience that influenced both his poetry.
Shelley and Keats Autumnal Theme in English Romantic Poetry: Shelley^Òs "Ode to the West Wind" and Keats^Òs "To Autumn. " A season of autumn is traditionally associated with transience and mutability, with dying of nature and expectations of the following winter time. For Romantic poets who are known for their extraordinary sensitivity to natural moods the period of fall becomes a great force for poetic creativity. Percy Bysshe Shelley^s "Ode to the West Wind" and John Keats^s ode "To Autumn" are two beautiful poems which were blown to its authors by the English autumn ^ both poets are influenced by the seasonal process in nature which ushers them into the mood of transience and aging.