Byron

John Nichol

Byron
Format
Paperback
Publisher
Cambridge University Press
Country
United Kingdom
Published
24 November 2011
Pages
234
ISBN
9781108034555

Byron

John Nichol

George Gordon, Lord Byron (1788-1824) is regarded as one of Britain’s greatest poets. As famous for his personality as he was for his poetry, he was rebellious, extravagant and controversial, his life peppered with scandal. First published in the English Men of Letters series in 1880, this biography by John Nichol (1833-94), who also wrote on Carlyle for the series, argues that while Byron did not shape the Romantic era, his work was still highly influential on his contemporaries. Setting Byron’s work in an historical context, Nichol shows how the society of his time both idolised him and condemned him as a moral outcast; he was also greatly admired for his efforts for the liberation of Greece from the Ottoman Empire, during which he died. Nichol also discusses the creation of the ‘Byronic hero’, as much a reflection of Byron’s flamboyant persona as an invented literary character.

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