TEXT A More than any other poet
Lord Byron has been identified with his own heroes with Childe Harold, the
romantic traveller; with Manfred, the outcast from society; with Don Juan, the
cynical, heartless lover. Although Byron did use his own life as the material
for much of his poetry, it is by no means purely autobiographical. It is,
however, in his long poems that Byron’s genius most truly resides rather than in
the lyrics which usually represent him in selections. Byron was
born into an aristocratic family of doubtful reputation. His father died of
drink and debauchery when Byron was 3, and when he was 10 his great uncle-Lord
Byron-also died. Byron inherited the title, a vast house called New stead Abbey,
and estates already mortgaged or in decay. Byron’s father, by
his first marriage, had a daughter, Augusta, Byron’s half-sister. His father’s
second wife, Byron’s own mother, was a proud Calvinistic Scotswoman named
Catherine Gordon of Gight. He was born with a malformed foot-a disability
which tortured him with self-consciousness in his youth. He went to Harrow
and to Trinity College, Cambridge, where, amongst other eccentricities, he kept
a bear. While an undergraduate he published his first book of poems, Hours of
Idleness. The adverse criticism it deservedly got stung Byron not to despair but
to revenge, and he replied with a satire in the manner of Pope called English
Bards and Scotch Reviewers. After Cambridge, Byron went on the grand tour of
Europe, traditional for men of his education; but owing to the Napoleonic Wars,
his route took him, not overland, as was usual by way of Paris to Rome, but by
sea to Lisbon, Spain, and the Mediterranean. For nearly 2 years he wandered
about Greece and the Aegean Islands. This was the shaping time of his
imagination. When he was 23, his mother died, and he came home,
an extremely handsome young man, to install himself boisterously at New stead
Abbey. He entered London society and spoke in the House of Lords.. It was now
that he showed his friend, R. C. Dallas, a new satire, Hints from Horace.
Dallas, secretly not much impressed, asked if he had anything else; Byron quite
casually said that he had a lot of Spenserian stanzas. Dallas read them with
astonishment and delight, showed them to Murray the publisher, and on 20
February 1812, the first two cantos of Childe Harold were: published. They took
the town by storm. Byron became famous overnight. He could not now write fast
enough, and in the next 4 years appeared a series of romantic poems, the best
among them being The Corsair and The Bride of Abydos. It is said that 14,000
copies of The Corsiar were sold in a day. Byron had always been
susceptible to women and attractive to them; now that he was successful, they
threw themselves at his head. For 3 years he lived in the limelight, and then,
quite unaccountably, married Ann Milbanke, a frigid, correct, intellectual
woman, entirely unsuited to him but with a lot of money. She bore him a daughter
and left him within a year, hinting that he had an immoral relationship with his
half-sister Augusta. Society turned against him, as lavish now with calumny and
spite as it had been with praise and flattery. Byron would not stay to be
insulted; he left England for good. The next few years were
spent mostly in Venice, where Byron established himself with a menagerie of
strange animals and conducted various love affairs. It was in Italy that his
masterpiece Don Juan was written. This brilliant, caustic, rambling satire is
written in a colloquial style which is the result of a mastery of technique.
Byron, always a fluent writer, was not over-critical of his own work; but Beppo,
A Vision of Judgment, and Don Juan more than justify his reputation as a great
poet. His influence on European literature--both by what he wrote and by the
general idea of the romantic figure of Childe Harold--the typical Byronic
hero-was very great. Like many poets, Byron was at heart a man
of action. He loved the idea of freedom, and threw himself with intense energy
into the Greek struggle for independence from Turkey. In 1823, he left Italy for
Greece, but the next year, worn out with the ardors of the campaign, he caught
rheumatic fever and died at Missolonghi, mourned as a national hero by the
Greeks. Byron’s genius is best displayed in______.
A.his lyrics B.his long poems C.his satire D.his Spenserian stanzas