Biography of Lord Byron

Download as pdf or txt
Download as pdf or txt
You are on page 1of 4

St Xavier’s College, Mahuadanr

Short Biography of Lord Byron

Lord Byron (George Gordon) 1788–1824

Lord Byron, the Poet and Playwright is regarded as one of the greatest British poets and is best
known for his amorous (passionate) lifestyle and his brilliant use of the English language.
George Gordon Noel Byron was born, with a clubbed right foot, in London on January 22, 1788.
He was the son of Catherine Gordon of Scots heiress, and Captain John (“Mad Jack”) Byron, a fortune-
hunting widower with a daughter, Augusta. The profligate captain squandered his wife’s inheritance,
was absent for the birth of his only son, and eventually ran off for France as an exile from English
creditors, where he died in 1791 at the age of 36.

Emotionally unstable, Catherine Byron raised her son in an atmosphere variously colored by her
excessive tenderness, fierce temper, insensitivity, and pride. From his Presbyterian nurse Byron
developed a lifelong love for the Bible and an abiding fascination with the Calvinist doctrines of innate
evil and predestined salvation. Early schooling instilled a devotion to reading and especially a “grand
passion” for history that informed much of his later writing.

From 1801 to 1805, he attended the Harrow School, where he excelled in oratory, wrote verse, and
played sports. Byron attended Trinity College, Cambridge, intermittently from October 1805 until July
1808, when he received a MA degree.

After receiving a scornful review of his first volume of poetry, Hours of Idleness , in 1808, Byron
retaliated with the satirical poem "English Bards and Scotch Reviewers." The poem attacked the literary
community with wit and satire, and gained him his first literary recognition. Upon turning 21, Byron
took his seat in the House of Lords. A year later, with John Hobhouse , he embarked on a grand tour
through the Mediterranean and Aegean seas, visiting Portugal, Spain, Malta, Albania, Greece and
Turkey.

'Childe Harold's Pilgrimage'

It was during his journey, filled with inspiration, he began writing "Childe Harold's Pilgrimage," a poem
of a young man's reflections on travel in foreign lands
Love Affairs & More Poems

In July 1811, Byron returned to London after the death of his mother, and in spite of all her
failings, her passing plunged him into a deep mourning. High praise by London society pulled him out
of his doldrums, as did a series of love affairs, first with the passionate and eccentric Lady Caroline
Lamb, who described Byron as "mad, bad and dangerous to know," and then with Lady Oxford, who
encouraged Byron's radicalism. Then, in the summer of 1813, Byron apparently entered into an intimate
relationship with his half sister, Augusta, now married. The tumult and guilt he experienced as a result
of these love affairs were reflected in a series of dark and repentant poems.

In September 1814, seeking to escape the pressures of his amorous entanglements, Byron
proposed to the educated and intellectual Anne Isabella Milbanke also known as Annabella Milbanke.
They married in January 1815, and in December of that year, their daughter Ada Lovelace, was born.
However, by January the ill-fated union crumbled, and Annabella left Byron amid his drinking,
increased debt, and rumors of his relations with his half sister and of his bisexuality. He never saw his
wife or daughter again.

Exile

In April 1816, Byron left England, never to return. He traveled to Geneva, Switzerland,
befriending Percy Bysshe Shelley, his wife Mary and her stepsister, Claire Clairmont. While in Geneva,
Byron wrote the third canto to "Childe Harold," depicting his travels from Belgium up the Rhine to
Switzerland.

Last Heroic Adventure

In 1823 a restless Byron accepted an invitation to support Greek independence from the Ottoman
Empire. Byron spent 4,000 pounds of his own money to refit the Greek naval fleet and took personal
command of a Greek unit of elite fighters. On February 15, 1824, he fell ill. Doctors bled him, which
weakened his condition further and likely gave him an infection.

Death
Byron died on April 19, 1824, at age 36. He was deeply mourned in England and became a hero in
Greece. His body was brought back to England, but the clergy refused to bury him at Westminster
Abbey, as was the custom for individuals of great stature. Instead, he was buried in the family vault near
Newstead. In 1969, a memorial to Byron was finally placed on the floor of Westminster Abbey.

The most flamboyant and notorious of the major English Romantic poets, George Gordon
created an immensely popular Romantic hero—defiant, melancholy, haunted by secret guilt—for
which, to many, he seemed the model. He is also a Romantic paradox: a leader of the era’s poetic
revolution, he named Alexander Pope as h is master. Byron was a worshiper of the ideal, he never lost
touch with reality; a freethinker, he retained from his youth a Calvinist sense of original sin; he
championed liberty in his works and deeds, giving money, time, energy, and finally his life to the Greek
war of independence. His personality found expression in satire, verse narrative, ode, lyric, speculative
drama, historical tragedy, confessional poetry, dramatic monologue, heroic couplets , blank verse , and
vigorous prose. In his dynamism, sexuality, self-revelation, and demands for freedom for oppressed
people everywhere, Byron captivated the Western mind and heart as few writers have, stamping upon
19th-century letters, arts, politics, even clothing styles, his image and name as the embodiment of
Romanticism.

Between 1821 and 1822, Byron edited the Carbonari society's short-lived newspaper, The Liberal.

Major works

 Hours of Idleness (1807)

 English Bards and Scotch Reviewers (1809)

 Childe Harold's Pilgrimage, Cantos I & II (1812)

 The Giaour (1813)

 The Bride of Abydos (1813)

 Lara, A Tale (1814)

 Hebrew Melodies (1815)

 The Siege of Corinth (1816)

 Parisina (1816)
 The Prisoner of Chillon (1816)

 The Dream (1816)

 Darkness (1816)

 The Lament of Tasso (1817)

 Childe Harold's Pilgrimage (1818

 Don Juan (1819–1824; incomplete on Byron's death in 1824)

 The Prophecy of Dante (1819)

 Cain (1821)

 The Vision of Judgment (1821)

 Heaven and Earth (1821)

 Werner (1822)

 The Age of Bronze (1823)

 The Island (1823)

 The Deformed Transformed (1824)

 Letters and journals, vol. 1 (1830)

 Letters and journals, vol. 2 (1830)

You might also like