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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Byron, by John Nichol
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Byron
+
+Author: John Nichol
+
+Release Date: November 16, 2003 [EBook #10100]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK BYRON ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Robert Connal and the Online Distributed
+Proofreading Team.
+
+
+
+
+
+BYRON
+
+BY
+
+JOHN NICHOL
+
+
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS.
+
+CHAPTER I.
+ANCESTRY AND FAMILY
+
+CHAPTER II.
+EARLY YEARS AND SCHOOL-LIFE. 1788-1808.
+
+CHAPTER III.
+CAMBRIDGE, AND FIRST PERIOD OF AUTHORSHIP--HOURS OF IDLENESS--BARDS AND
+REVIEWERS. 1808-1809.
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+TWO YEARS OF TRAVEL. 1809-1811.
+
+CHAPTER V.
+LIFE IN LONDON--CORRESPONDENCE WITH SCOTT AND MOORE--SECOND PERIOD OF
+AUTHORSHIP--HAROLD (I., II.). AND THE ROMANCES. 1811-1815.
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+MARRIAGE AND SEPARATION--FAREWELL TO ENGLAND. 1815-1816.
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+SWITZERLAND--VENICE--THIRD PERIOD OF AUTHORSHIP--HAROLD (III., IV.)
+--MANFRED. 1816-1820.
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+RAVENNA--COUNTESS GUICCIOLI--THE DRAMAS--CAIN--VISION OF JUDGMENT.
+1820-1821.
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+PISA--GENOA--THE LIBERAL--DON JUAN. 1821-1823.
+
+CHAPTER. X.
+POLITICS--THE CARBONARI--EXPEDITION TO GREECE--DEATH. 1821-1824.
+
+CHAPTER XI.
+CHARACTERISTICS, AND PLACE IN LITERATURE
+
+INDEX
+
+
+
+
+BOOKS CONSULTED.
+
+1. The Narrative of the Honourable John Byron, Commodore, in a late
+ Expedition Round the World, &c. (Baker and Leigh) 1768
+
+2. Voyage of H.M.S. _Blonde_ to the Sandwich Islands in the years
+ 1824-1825, the Right Hon. Lord Byron, Commander (John Murray) 1826
+
+3. Memoirs of the Life and Writings of the Right Hon. Lord Byron (H.
+ Colburn) 1822
+
+4. The Life, Writings, Opinions, and Times of G.G. Noel Byron, with
+ courtiers of tho present polished and enlightened age, &c., &c.,
+ 3 vols. (M. Hey) 1825
+
+5. Narrative of Lord Byron's last Journey to Greece, from Journal of
+ Count Peter Gamba 1825
+
+6. Medwin's Conversations with Lord Byron at Pisa, 2 vols. (H. Colburn)
+ 1825
+
+7. Leigh Hunt's Byron and His Contemporaries (H. Colburn)
+ 1828
+
+8. The Works of Lord Byron, with Life by Thomas Moore, 17
+ vols. (Murray) 1832
+
+9. Galt's Life of Lord Byron (Colburn and Buntley) 1830
+
+10. Kennedy's Conversations on Religion (Murray) 1830
+
+11. Countess of Blessington's Conversations (Colburn) 1834
+
+12. Lady Morgan's Memoirs, 2 vols. (W.H. Allen) 1842
+
+13. Recollections of the Countess Guiccioli (Bentley) 1869
+
+14. Castelar's Genius and Character of Byron (Tinsley) 1870
+
+15. Elze's Life of Lord Byron (Murray) 1872
+
+16. Trelawny's Reminiscences of Byron and Shelley 1858
+
+17. Torrens' Memoirs of Viscount Melbourne (Macmillan) 1878
+
+18. Rev. F. Hodgson's Memoirs, 2 vols. (Macimillan) 1879
+
+19. Essays and Articles, or Recorded Criticisms, by Macaulay, Scott,
+ Shelley, Goethe, G. Brandes, Mazzini, Sainte Beuve, Chasles, H.
+ Taine, &c.
+
+20. Burke's Peerage and Baronetage 1879
+
+
+
+
+GENEALOGY OF THE BYRON FAMILY.
+
+
+THE BYRON FAMILY, FROM THE CONQUEST
+
+Ralph de Burun (estates in Nottingham and Derby).
+|
+Hugh de Burun (Lord of Horestan).
+|
+Hugh de Buron (became a monk).
+|
+Sir Roger de Buron (gave lands to monks of Swinstead).
+|
+| Sir Richard Clayton.
+| |
+Robert de Byron. = Cecelia
+|
+Robert de Byron
+|
+Sir John Byron (Governor of York under Edward I.).
+|
+--------------------------------
+| |
+Sir Richard Byron. Sir John (knighted at siege of Calais)
+|
+Sir John (knighted in 3rd year of Henry V.).
+|
+| Sir John Butler.
+| |
+Sir Nicholas. = Alice.
+|
+-----------------------------------
+| |
+Sir Nicholas (made K.B. at Sir John (knighted by Richmond
+ marriage of Prince Arthur, at Milford; fought at Bosworth;
+ died 1503). died 1488).
+|
+Sir John Byron = 2nd wife, widow of George Halgh.
+ (received grant of Newstead from Henry VIII., May 26,1540).
+|
+Bar // Sinister
+| Sir Nicholas Strelleye
+| |
+John Byron, of Clayton = Alice
+ (inherited by gift, knighted by Elizabeth, 1579).
+|
+-------------------------------------
+| |
+| Sir Nicholas
+| Sir Richard Molyneux
+| |
+Sir John = Anne
+ (K.B. at coronation of James I; Governor of Tower).
+|
+--------------------------------------
+| |
+RICHARD, 2nd Lord (1605-1679) Sir JOHN 1st Lord (created
+ (Buried at Hucknal Torkard) Baron Byron of Rochdale,
+| Oct. 24, 1643; at Newbury,
+| Edgehill, Chester, &c.
+| Viscount Chaworth Governor of Duke of York; died
+| | at Paris, 1652).
+WILLIAM, 3rd Lord = Elizabeth.
+ (died 1695)
+| Lord Berkeley.
+| |
+WILLIAM, 4th Lord = Frances (3rd wife)
+ (1669-1736)
+|
+---------------------------
+| |
+Admiral John (1723-1786) |- WILLIAM, 5th Lord (1722-1798) (killed Mr.
+| "Foul-weather Jack"). | Chaworth; survived his sons
+| | and a grandson, who died 1794;
+| | called "The wicked Lord").
+| |
+| | - Isabella = Lord Carlisle
+| |
+| Lord Carlisle (the poet's
+| guardian).
+---------------------------
+| |
+| |- A daughter
+| | |
+| | Colonel Leigh
+| |
+| |- George Anson (1758-1793).
+| |
+| Admiral GEORGE ANSON, 7th Lord
+| (1789-1868)
+| |
+| ----
+| |- Frederick
+| | |
+| | GEORGE F. WILLIAM, 9th and present
+| | Lord Byron.
+| |
+| |- GEORGE, 8th Lord (1818-1870)
+|
+-------------------
+ |
+1. Marchioness = John Byron (1751-1791) = 2. Miss Gordon of Gight
+ of Carmarthen | |
+ | |
+Colonel Leigh = Augusta GEORGE GORDON, 6th Lord
+ | | (1788-1824). Married
+ Several daughters | Anna Isabella (1792-1860),
+ | daughter of Sir Ralph
+ | Milbanke and Judith,
+ | daughter of Sir Edward
+ | Noel (Viscount Wentworth),
+ | and by her had
+ -------------------------
+ |
+ Earl Lovelace = Augusta-Ada (1815-1852).
+ |
+ --------------------------------------
+ | | |
+Mr. Blunt = Lady Anne. Byron Noel Ralph Gordon,
+ (died 1862) now Lord Wentworth
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+
+ANCESTRY AND FAMILY.
+
+Byron's life was passed under the fierce light that beats upon an
+intellectual throne. He succeeded in making himself--what he wished to
+be--the most notorious personality in the world of letters of our century.
+Almost every one who came in contact with him has left on record various
+impressions of intimacy or interview. Those whom he excluded or
+patronized, maligned; those to whom he was genial, loved him. Mr. Southey,
+in all sincerity, regarded him as the principle of Evil incarnate; an
+American writer of tracts in the form of stories is of the same opinion:
+to the Countess Guiccioli he is an archangel. Mr. Carlyle considers him to
+have been a mere "sulky dandy." Goethe ranks him as the first English
+poet after Shakespeare, and is followed by the leading critics of France,
+Italy, and Spain. All concur in the admission that Byron was as proud of
+his race as of his verse, and that in unexampled measure the good and evil
+of his nature were inherited and inborn. His genealogy is, therefore, a
+matter of no idle antiquarianism.
+
+There are legends of old Norse Buruns migrating from their home in
+Scandinavia, and settling, one branch in Normandy, another in Livonia. To
+the latter belonged a distant Marshal de Burun, famous for the almost
+absolute power he wielded in the then infant realm of Russia. Two members
+of the family came over with the Conqueror, and settled in England. Of
+Erneis de Burun, who had lands in York and Lincoln, we hear little more.
+Ralph, the poet's ancestor, is mentioned in Doomsday Book--our first
+authentic record--as having estates in Nottinghamshire and Derby. His son
+Hugh was lord of Horestan Castle in the latter county, and with his son of
+the same name, under King Stephen, presented the church of Ossington to
+the monks of Lenton. Tim latter Hugh joined their order; but the race was
+continued by his son Sir Roger, who gave lands to the monastery of
+Swinstead. This brings us to the reign of Henry II. (1155-1189), when
+Robert de Byron adopted the spelling of his name afterwards retained, and
+by his marriage with Cecilia, heir of Sir Richard Clayton, added to the
+family possessions an estate; in Lancashire, where, till the time of Henry
+VIII., they fixed their seat. The poet, relying on old wood-carvings at
+Newstead, claims for some of his ancestors a part in the crusades, and
+mentions a name not apparently belonging to that age--
+
+ Near Ascalon's towers, John of Horestan slumbers--
+
+a romance, like many of his, possibly founded on fact, but incapable of
+verification.
+
+Two grandsons of Sir Robert have a more substantial fame, having served
+with distinction in the wars of Edward I. The elder of these was governor
+of the city of York. Some members of his family fought at Cressy, and one
+of his sons, Sir John, was knighted by Edward III. at the siege of Calais.
+Descending through the other, Sir Richard, we come to another Sir John,
+knighted by Richmond, afterwards Henry VII., on his landing at Milford. He
+fought, with his kin, on the field of Bosworth, and dying without issue,
+left the estates to his brother, Sir Nicholas, knighted in 1502, at the
+marriage of Prince Arthur. The son of Sir Nicholas, known as "little Sir
+John of the great beard," appears to have been a favourite of Henry VIII.,
+who made him Steward of Manchester and Lieutenant of Sherwood, and on the
+dissolution of the monasteries presented him with the Priory of Newstead,
+the rents of which were equivalent to about 4000l. of our money. Sir John,
+who stepped into the Abbey in 1540, married twice, and the premature
+appearance of a son by the second wife--widow of Sir George Halgh--brought
+the bar sinister of which so much has been made. No indication of this
+fact, however, appears in the family arms, and it is doubtful if the poet
+was aware of a reproach which in any case does not touch his descent. The
+"filius naturalis," John Byron of Clayton, inherited by deed of gift, and
+was knighted by Queen Elizabeth in 1579. His descendants were prominent as
+staunch Royalists during the whole period of the Civil Wars. At Edgehill
+there were seven Byrons on the field.
+
+ On Marston, with Rupert 'gainst traitors contending,
+ Four brothers enrich'd with their blood the bleak field.
+
+Sir Nicholas, one of the seven, is extolled as "a person of great
+affability and dexterity, as well as martial knowledge, which gave great
+life to the designs of the well affected." He was taken prisoner by the
+Parliament while acting as governor of Chester. Under his nephew, Sir
+John, Newstead is said to have been besieged and taken; but the knight
+escaped, in the words of the poet--never a Radical at heart--a "protecting
+genius,
+
+ For nobler combats here reserved his life,
+ To lead the band where godlike Falkland foil."
+
+Clarendon, indeed, informs us, that on the morning before the battle,
+Falkland, "very cheerful, as always upon action, put himself into the
+first rank of the Lord Byron's regiment." This slightly antedates his
+title. The first battle of Newbury was fought on September, 1643. For his
+services there, and at a previous royal victory, over Waller in July, Sir
+John was, on October 24th of the same year, created Baron of Rochdale, and
+so became the first Peer of the family.
+
+This first lord was succeeded by his brother Richard (1605-1079), famous
+in the war for his government and gallant defence of Newark. He rests in
+the vault that now contains the dust of the greatest of his race, Hucknall
+Torkard Church, where his epitaph records the fact that the family lost
+all their present fortunes by their loyalty, adding, "yet it pleased God
+so to bless the humble endeavours of the said Richard, Lord Byron, that he
+repurchased part of their ancient inheritance, which he left to his
+posterity, with a laudable memory for his great piety and charity." His
+eldest son, William, the third Lord (died 1695), is worth remembering on
+two accounts. He married Elizabeth, the daughter of Viscount Chaworth, and
+so wove the first link in a strange association of tragedy and romance: he
+was a patron of one of those poets who, approved by neither gods nor
+columns, are remembered by the accident of an accident, and was himself a
+poetaster, capable of the couplet,--
+
+ My whole ambition only does extend
+ To gain the name of Shipman's faithful friend,--
+
+an ambition which, considering its moderate scope, may be granted to have
+attained its desire.
+
+His successor, the fourth lord (1669-1736), gentleman of the bedchamber to
+Prince George of Denmark, himself living a quiet life, became, by his
+third wife, Frances, daughter of Lord Berkeley, the progenitor of a
+strange group of eccentric, adventurous, and passionate spirits. The
+eldest son, the fifth lord, and immediate predecessor in the peerage of
+the poet, was born in 1722, entered the naval service, left his ship, the
+"Victory," just before she was lost on the rocks of Alderney, and
+subsequently became master of the stag-hounds. In 1765, the year of the
+passing of the American Stamp Act, an event occurred which coloured the
+whole of his after-life, and is curiously illustrative of the manners of
+the time. On January 26th or 29th (accounts vary) ten members of an
+aristocratic social club sat down to dinner in Pall-mall. Lord Byron and
+Mr. Chaworth, his neighbour and kinsman, were of the party. In the course
+of the evening, when the wine was going round, a dispute arose between
+them about the management of game, so frivolous that one conjectures the
+quarrel to have been picked to cloak some other cause of offence. Bets
+were offered, and high words passed, but the company thought the matter
+had blown over. On going out, however, the disputants met on the stairs,
+and one of the two, it is uncertain which, cried out to the waiter to show
+them an empty room. This was done, and a single tallow candle being placed
+on the table, the door was shut. A few minutes later a bell was rung, and
+the hotel master rushing in, Mr. Chaworth was found mortally wounded.
+There had been a struggle in the dim light, and Byron, having received the
+first lunge harmlessly in his waistcoat, had shortened his sword and run
+his adversary through the body, with the boast, not uncharacteristic of
+his grand nephew, "By G-d, I have as much courage as any man in England."
+A coroner's inquest was held, and he was committed to the Tower on a
+charge of murder. The interest in the trial which subsequently took place
+in Westminster Hall, was so great that tickets of admission were sold for
+six guineas. The peers, after two days' discussion, unanimously returned a
+verdict of manslaughter. Byron, pleading his privileges, and paying his
+fees, was set at liberty; but he appears henceforth as a spectre-haunted
+man, roaming about under false names, or shut up in the Abbey like a
+baited savage, shunned by his fellows high and low, and the centre of the
+wildest stories. That he shot a coachman, and flung the body into the
+carriage beside his wife, who very sensibly left him; that he tried to
+drown her; that he had devils to attend him--were among the many weird
+legends of "the wicked lord." The poet himself says that his ancestor's
+only companions were the crickets that used to crawl over him, receive
+stripes with straws when they misbehaved, and on his death made an exodus
+in procession from the house. When at home he spent his time in
+pistol-shooting, making sham fights with wooden ships about the rockeries
+of the lake, and building ugly turrets on the battlements. He hated his
+heir presumptive, sold the estate of Rochdale,--a proceeding afterwards
+challenged--and cut down the trees of Newstead, to spite him; but he
+survived his three sons, his brother, and his only grandson, who was
+killed in Corsica in 1794.
+
+On his own death in 1798, the estates and title passed to George Gordon,
+then a child of ten, whom he used to talk of, without a shadow of
+interest, as "the little boy who lives at Aberdeen." His sister Isabella
+married Lord Carlisle, and became the mother of the fifth Earl, the poet's
+nominal guardian. She was a lady distinguished for eccentricity of
+manners, and (like her son satirized in the _Bards and Reviewers_) for the
+perpetration of indifferent verses. The career of the fourth lord's second
+son, John, the poet's grandfather, recalls that of the sea-kings from whom
+the family claim to have sprung. Born in 1723, he at an early age entered
+the naval service, and till his death in 1786 was tossed from storm to
+storm. "He had no rest on sea, nor I on shore," writes his illustrious
+descendant. In 1740 a fleet of five ships was sent out under Commodore
+Anson to annoy the Spaniards, with whom we were then at war, in the South
+Seas. Byron took service as a midshipman in one of those ships--all more
+or less unfortunate--called "The Wager." Being a bad sailor, and heavily
+laden, she was blown from her company, and wrecked in the Straits of
+Magellan. The majority of the crew were cast on a bleak rock, which they
+christened Mount Misery. After encountering all the horrors of mutiny and
+famine, and being in various ways deserted, five of the survivors, among
+them Captain Cheap and Mr. Byron, were taken by some Patagonians to the
+Island of Chiloe, and thence, after some months, to Valparaiso. They were
+kept for nearly two years as prisoners at St. Iago, the capital of Chili,
+and in December, 1744, put on board a French frigate, which reached Brest
+in October, 1745. Early in 1746 they arrived at Dover in a Dutch vessel.
+
+This voyage is the subject of a well-known apostrophe in _The Pleasures of
+Hope_, beginning--
+
+ And such thy strength-inspiring aid that bore The hardy Byron from his
+ native shore. In torrid climes, where Chiloe's tempests sweep
+ Tumultuous murmurs o'er the troubled deep, 'Twas his to mourn
+ misfortune's rudest shock, Scourged by the winds and cradled by the
+ rock.
+
+Byron's own account of his adventures, published in 1768, is remarkable
+for freshness of scenery like that of our first literary traveller, Sir
+John Mandeville, and a force of description which recalls Defoe. It
+interests us more especially from the use that has been made of it in that
+marvellous mosaic of voyages, the shipwreck, in _Don Juan_, the hardships
+of his hero being, according to the poet--
+
+ Comparative
+ To those related in my grand-dad's narrative.
+
+In June, 1764, Byron sailed with two ships, the "Dolphin" and the "Tamar,"
+on a voyage of discovery arranged by Lord Egmont, to seek a southern
+continent, in the course of which he took possession of the largest of the
+Falkland Islands, again passed through the Magellanic Straits, and sailing
+home by the Pacific, circumnavigated the globe. The planets so conspired
+that, though his affable manners and considerate treatment made him always
+popular with his men, sailors became afraid to serve under "foul-weather
+Jack." In 1748 he married the daughter of a Cornish squire, John
+Trevanion. They had two sons and three daughters. One of the latter
+married her cousin (the fifth lord's eldest son), who died in 1776,
+leaving as his sole heir the youth who fell in the Mediterranean in 1794.
+
+The eldest son of the veteran, John Byron, father of the poet, was born in
+1751, educated at Westminster, and, having received a commission, became a
+captain in the guards; but his character, fundamentally unprincipled, soon
+developed itself in such a manner as to alienate him from his family. In
+1778, under circumstances of peculiar effrontery, he seduced Amelia
+D'Arcy, the daughter of the Earl of Holdernesse, in her own right Countess
+Conyers, then wife of the Marquis of Carmarthen, afterwards Duke of Leeds.
+"Mad Jack," as he was called, seems to have boasted of his conquest; but
+the marquis, to whom his wife had hitherto been devoted, refused to
+believe the rumours that were afloat, till an intercepted letter,
+containing a remittance of money, for which Byron, in reverse of the usual
+relations, was always clamouring, brought matters to a crisis. The pair
+decamped to the continent; and in 1779, after the marquis had obtained a
+divorce, they were regularly married. Byron seems to have been not only
+profligate but heartless, and he made life wretched to the woman he was
+even more than most husbands bound to cherish. She died in 1784, having
+given birth to two daughters. One died in infancy; the other was Augusta,
+the half sister and good genius of the poet, whose memory remains like a
+star on the fringe of a thunder-cloud, only brighter by the passing of the
+smoke of calumny. In 1807 she married Colonel Leigh, and had a numerous
+family, most of whom died young. Her eldest daughter, Georgiana, married
+Mr. Henry Trevanion. The fourth, Medora, had an unfortunate history, the
+nucleus of an impertinent and happily ephemeral romance.
+
+The year after the death of his first wife, John Byron, who seems to have
+had the fascinations of a Barry Lyndon, succeeded in entrapping a second.
+This was Miss Catherine Gordon of Gight, a lady with considerable estates
+in Aberdeenshire--which attracted the adventurer--and an overweening
+Highland pride in her descent from James I., the greatest of the Stuarts,
+through his daughter Annabella, and the second Earl of Huntly. This union
+suggested the ballad of an old rhymer, beginning--
+
+ O whare are ye gaen, bonny Miss Gordon,
+ O whare are ye gaen, sae bonny and braw?
+ Ye've married, ye've married wi' Johnny Byron,
+ To squander the lands o' Gight awa'.
+
+The prophecy was soon fulfilled. The property of the Scotch heiress was
+squandered with impetuous rapidity by the English rake. In 1780 she left
+Scotland for France, and returned to England toward the close of the
+following year. On the 22nd of January, 1788, in Holles Street, London,
+Mrs. Byron gave birth to her only child, George Gordon, sixth Lord.
+Shortly after, being pressed by his creditors, the father abandoned both,
+and leaving them with a pittance of 150 _l_ a year, fled to Valenciennes,
+where he died, in August, 1791.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+
+EARLY YEARS AND SCHOOL LIFE.
+
+Soon after the birth of her son, Mrs. Byron took him to Scotland. After
+spending some time with a relation, she, early in 1790, settled in a small
+house at Aberdeen. Ere long her husband, who had in the interval
+dissipated away his remaining means, rejoined her; and they lived together
+in humble lodgings, until their tempers, alike fiery and irritable,
+compelled a definite separation. They occupied apartments, for some time,
+at the opposite ends of the same street, and interchanged visits. Being
+accustomed to meet the boy and his nurse, the father expressed a wish that
+the former should be sent to live with him, at least for some days. "To
+this request," Moore informs us, "Mrs. Byron was at first not very willing
+to accede; but, on the representation of the nurse that if he kept him
+over one night he would not do so another, she consented. On inquiring
+next morning after the child, she was told by Captain Byron that he had
+had quite enough of his young visitor." After a short stay in the north,
+the Captain, extorting enough money from his wife to enable him to fly
+from his creditors, escaped to France. His absence must have been a
+relief; but his death is said to have so affected the unhappy lady, that
+her shrieks disturbed the neighbourhood. The circumstance recalls an
+anecdote of a similar outburst--attested by Sir W. Scott, who was present
+on the occasion--before her marriage. Being present at a representation,
+in Edinburgh, of the _Fatal Marriage_, when Mrs. Siddons was personating
+Isabella, Miss Gordon was seized with a fit, and carried out of the
+theatre, screaming out "O my Biron, my Biron." All we know of her
+character shows it to have been not only proud, impulsive, and wayward,
+but hysterical. She constantly boasted of her descent, and clung to the
+courtesy title of "honourable," to which she had no claim. Her affection
+and anger were alike demonstrative, her temper never for an hour secure.
+She half worshipped, half hated, the blackguard to whom she was married,
+and took no steps to protect her property; her son she alternately petted
+and abused. "Your mother's a fool!" said a school companion to him years
+after. "I know it," was his unique and tragic reply. Never was poet born
+to so much illustrious, and to so much bad blood. The records of his
+infancy betray the temper which he preserved through life--passionate,
+sullen, defiant of authority, but singularly amenable to kindness. On
+being scolded by his first nurse for having soiled a dress, without
+uttering a word he tore it from top to seam, as he had seen his mother
+tear her caps and gowns; but her sister and successor in office, May Gray,
+acquired and retained a hold over his affections, to which he has borne
+grateful testimony. To her training is attributed the early and remarkable
+knowledge of the Scriptures, especially of the Psalms, which he possessed:
+he was, according to her later testimony, peculiarly inquisitive and
+puzzling about religion. Of the sense of solitude, induced by his earliest
+impressions, he characteristically makes a boast. "My daughter, my wife,
+my half-sister, my mother, my sister's mother, my natural daughter, and
+myself, are or were all only children. But the fiercest animals have the
+fewest numbers in their litters, as lions, tigers, &c."
+
+To this practical orphanhood, and inheritance of feverish passion, there
+was added another, and to him a heavy and life-long burden. A physical
+defect in a healthy nature may either pass without notice or be turned to
+a high purpose. No line of his work reveals the fact that Sir Walter Scott
+was lame. The infirmity failed to cast even a passing shade over that
+serene power. Milton's blindness is the occasion of the noblest prose and
+verse of resignation in the language. But to understand Pope, we must
+remember that he was a cripple: and Byron never allows us to forget,
+because he himself never forgot it. Accounts differ as to the extent and
+origin of his deformity; and the doubts on the matter are not removed by
+the inconsistent accounts of the indelicate post-mortem examination made
+by Mr. Trelawny at Mesolonghi. It is certain that one of the poet's feet
+was, either at birth or at a very early period, so seriously clubbed or
+twisted as to affect his gait, and to a considerable extent his habits. It
+also appears that the surgical means--boots, bandages, &c.--adopted to
+straighten the limb, only aggravated the evil. His sensitiveness on the
+subject was early awakened by careless or unfeeling references. "What a
+pretty boy Byron is," said a friend of his nurse. "What a pity he has such
+a leg." On which the child, with flashing eyes, cutting at her with a
+baby's whip, cried out, "Dinna speak of it." His mother herself, in her
+violent fits, when the boy ran round the room laughing at her attempts to
+catch him, used to say he was a little dog, as bad as his father, and to
+call him "a lame brat"--an incident, which, notoriously suggested the
+opening scene of the _Deformed Transformed_. In the height of his
+popularity he fancied that the beggars and street-sweepers in London were
+mocking him. He satirized and discouraged dancing; he preferred riding and
+swimming to other exercises, because they concealed his weakness; and on
+his death-bed asked to be blistered in such a way that he might not be
+called on to expose it. The Countess Guiccioli, Lady Blessington, and
+others, assure us that in society few would have observed the defect if he
+had not referred to it; but it was never far from the mind, and therefore
+never far from the mouth, of the least reticent of men.
+
+In 1792 he was sent to a rudimentary day school of girls and boys, taught
+by a Mr. Bowers, where he seems to have learnt nothing save to repeat
+monosyllables by rote. He next passed through the hands of a devout and
+clever clergyman, named Ross, under whom according to his own account he
+made astonishing progress, being initiated into the study of Roman
+history, and taking special delight in the battle of Regillus. Long
+afterwards, when standing on the heights of Tusculum and looking down on
+the little round lake, he remembered his young enthusiasm and his old
+instructor. He next came under the charge of a tutor called Paterson, whom
+he describes as "a very serious, saturnine, but kind young man. He was the
+son of my shoemaker, but a good scholar. With him I began Latin, and
+continued till I went to the grammar school, where I threaded all the
+classes to the fourth, when I was recalled to England by the demise of my
+uncle."
+
+Of Byron's early school days there is little further record. We learn from
+scattered hints that he was backward in technical scholarship, and low in
+his class, in which he seems to have had no ambition to stand high; but
+that he eagerly took to history and romance, especially luxuriating in the
+_Arabian Nights_. He was an indifferent penman, and always disliked
+mathematics; but was noted by masters and mates as of quick temper, eager
+for adventures, prone to sports, always more ready to give a blow than to
+take one, affectionate, though resentful.
+
+When his cousin was killed at Corsica, in 1794, he became the next heir to
+the title. In 1797, a friend, meaning to compliment the boy, said, "We
+shall have the pleasure some day of reading your speeches in the House of
+Commons," he, with precocious consciousness, replied, "I hope not. If you
+read any speeches of mine, it will be in the House of Lords." Similarly,
+when, in the course of the following year, the fierce old man at Newstead
+died, and the young lord's name was called at school with "Dominus"
+prefixed to it, his emotion was so great that he was unable to answer, and
+burst into tears.
+
+Belonging to this period is the somewhat shadowy record of a childish
+passion for a distant cousin slightly his senior, Mary Duff, with whom he
+claims to have fallen in love in his ninth year. We have a quaint picture
+of the pair sitting on the grass together, the girl's younger sister
+beside them playing with a doll. A German critic gravely remarks, "This
+strange phenomenon places him beside Dante." Byron himself, dilating on
+the strength of his attachment, tells us that he used to coax a maid to
+write letters for him, and that when he was sixteen, on being informed, by
+his mother, of Mary's marriage, he nearly fell into convulsions. But in
+the history of the calf-loves of poets it is difficult to distinguish
+between the imaginative afterthought and the reality. This equally applies
+to other recollections of later years. Moore remarks--"that the charm of
+scenery, which derives its chief power from fancy and association, should
+be felt at an age when fancy is yet hardly awake and associations are but
+few, can with difficulty he conceived." But between the ages of eight and
+ten, an appreciation of external beauty is sufficiently common. No one
+doubts the accuracy of Wordsworth's account, in the _Prelude_ of his early
+half-sensuous delight in mountain glory. It is impossible to define the
+influence of Nature, either on nations or individuals, or to say
+beforehand what selection from his varied surroundings a poet will for
+artistic purposes elect to make. Shakespeare rests in meadows and glades,
+and leaves to Milton "Teneriffe and Atlas." Burns, who lived for a
+considerable part of his life in daily view of the hills of Arran, never
+alludes to them. But, in this respect like Shelley, Byron was inspired by
+a passion for the high-places of the earth. Their shadow is on half his
+verse. "The loftiest peaks most wrapt in clouds and snow" perpetually
+remind him of one of his constantly recurring refrains,--
+
+ He who surpasses or subdues mankind,
+ Must look down on the hate of those below.
+
+In the course of 1790, after an attack of scarlet fever at Aberdeen he was
+taken by his mother to Ballater, and on his recovery spent much of his
+time in rambling about the country. "From this period," he says, "I date
+my love of mountainous countries. I can never forget the effect, years
+afterwards, in England, of the only thing I had long seen, even in
+miniature, of a mountain, in the Malvern Hills. After I returned to
+Cheltenham I used to watch them every afternoon, at sunset, with a
+sensation which I cannot describe." Elsewhere, in _The Island_ he returns,
+amid allusions to the Alps and Apennines, to the friends of his youth:--
+
+ The infant rapture still survived the boy,
+ And Lach-na-gair with Ida look'd o'er Troy,
+ Mixed Celtic memories with the Phrygian mount,
+ And Highland linns with Castalie's clear fount.
+
+The poet, owing to his physical defect, was not a great climber, and we
+are informed, on the authority of his nurse, that he never even scaled the
+easily attainable summit of the "steep frowning" hill of which he has made
+such effective use. But the impression of it from a distance was none the
+less genuine. In the midst of a generous address, in _Don Juan_, to
+Jeffrey, he again refers to the same associations with the country of his
+early training:--
+
+ But I am half a Scot by birth, and bred
+ A whole one; and my heart flies to my head
+ As "Auld Lang Syne" brings Scotland, one and all--
+ Scotch plaids, Scotch snoods, the blue hills and clear streams,
+ The Dee, the Don, Balgounie's brig's black wall--
+ All my boy feelings, all my gentler dreams
+ Of what I then dreamt, clothed in their own pall,
+ Like Banquo's offspring...
+
+Byron's allusions to Scotland are variable and inconsistent. His satire on
+her reviewers was sharpened by the show of national as well as personal
+antipathy; and when, about the time of its production, a young lady
+remarked that he had a little of the northern manner of speech, he burst
+out "Good God! I hope not. I would rather the whole d----d country was
+sunk in the sea. I the Scotch accent!" But, in the passage from which we
+have quoted, the swirl of feeling on the other side continues,--
+
+ I rail'd at Scots to show my wrath and wit,
+ Which must be own'd was sensitive and surly.
+ Yet 'tis in vain such sallies to permit;
+ They cannot quench young feelings, fresh and early.
+ I scotch'd, not kill'd, the Scotchman in my blood,
+ And love the land of mountain and of flood.
+
+This suggests a few words on a question of more than local interest.
+Byron's most careful biographer has said of him: "Although on his first
+expedition to Greece he was dressed in the tartan of the Gordon clan, yet
+the whole bent of his mind, and the character of his poetry, are anything
+but Scottish. Scottish nationality is tainted with narrow and provincial
+elements. Byron's poetic character, on the other hand, is universal and
+cosmopolitan. He had no attachment to localities, and never devoted
+himself to the study of the history of Scotland and its romantic legends."
+Somewhat similarly Thomas Campbell remarks of Burns, "he was the most
+un-Scotsmanlike of Scotchmen, having no caution." Rough national verdicts
+are apt to be superficial. Mr. Leslie Stephen, in a review of Hawthorne,
+has commented on the extent to which the nobler qualities and conquering
+energy of the English character are hidden, not only from foreigners, but
+from ourselves, by the "detestable lay figure" of John Bull. In like
+manner, the obtrusive type of the "canny Scot" is apt to make critics
+forget the hot heart that has marked the early annals of the country, from
+the Hebrides to the Borders, with so much violence, and at the same time
+has been the source of so much strong feeling and persistent purpose. Of
+late years, the struggle for existence, the temptations of a too ambitious
+and over active people in the race for wealth, and the benumbing effect of
+the constant profession of beliefs that have ceased to be sincere, have
+for the most part stifled the fervid fire in calculating prudence. These
+qualities have been adequately combined in Scott alone, the one massive
+and complete literary type of his race. Burns, to his ruin, had only the
+fire: the same is true of Byron, whose genius, in some respects less
+genuine, was indefinitely and inevitably wider. His intensely susceptible
+nature took a dye from every scene, city, and society through which he
+passed; but to the last he bore with him the marks of a descendant of the
+Sea-Kings, and of the mad Gordons in whose domains he had first learned to
+listen to the sound of the "two mighty voices" that haunted and inspired
+him through life.
+
+In the autumn of 1798 the family, i.e. his mother--who had sold the whole
+of her household furniture for 75 _l_--with himself, and a maid, set
+south. The poet's only recorded impression of the journey is a gleam of
+Loch Leven, to which he refers in one of his latest letters. He never
+revisited the land of his childhood. Our next glimpse of him is on his
+passing the toll-bar of Newstead. Mrs. Byron asked the old woman who kept
+it, "Who is the next heir?" and on her answer "They say it is a little boy
+who lives at Aberdeen," "This is he, bless him!" exclaimed the nurse.
+
+Returned to the ancestral Abbey, and finding it half ruined and desolate,
+they migrated for a time to the neighbouring Nottingham. Here the child's
+first experience was another course of surgical torture. He was placed
+under the charge of a quack named Lavender, who rubbed his foot in oil,
+and screwed it about in wooden machines. This useless treatment is
+associated with two characteristic anecdotes. One relates to the endurance
+which Byron, on every occasion of mere physical trial, was capable of
+displaying. Mr. Rogers, a private tutor, with whom he was reading passages
+of Virgil and Cicero, remarked, "It makes me uncomfortable, my lord, to
+see you sitting them in such pain as I know you must be suffering." "Never
+mind, Mr. Rogers." said the child, "you shall not see any signs of it in
+me." The other illustrates his precocious delight in detecting imposture.
+Having scribbled on a piece of paper several lines of mere gibberish, he
+brought them to Lavender, and gravely asked what language it was; and on
+receiving the answer "It is Italian," he broke into an exultant laugh at
+the expense of his tormentor. Another story survives, of his vindictive
+spirit giving birth to his first rhymes. A meddling old lady, who used to
+visit his mother and was possessed of a curious belief in a future
+transmigration to our satellite--the bleakness of whose scenery she had
+not realized--having given him some cause of offence, he stormed out to
+his nurse that he "could not bear the sight of the witch," and vented his
+wrath in the quatrain.--
+
+ In Nottingham county there lives, at Swan Green,
+ As curst an old lady as ever was seen;
+ And when she does die, which I hope will be soon,
+ She firmly believes she will go to the moon.
+
+The poet himself dates his "first dash into poetry" a year later (1800),
+from his juvenile passion for his cousin Margaret Parker, whose subsequent
+death from an injury caused by a fall he afterwards deplored in a
+forgotten elegy. "I do not recollect," he writes through the transfiguring
+mists of memory, "anything equal to the _transparent_ beauty of my cousin,
+or to the sweetness of her temper, during the short period of our
+intimacy. She looked as if she had been made out of a rainbow--all beauty
+and peace. My passion had the usual effects upon me--I could not sleep; I
+could not eat; I could not rest. It was the texture of my life to think of
+the time that must elapse before we could meet again. But I was a fool
+then, and not much wiser now." _Sic transit secunda_.
+
+The departure at a somewhat earlier date of May Gray for her native
+country, gave rise to evidence of another kind of affection. On her
+leaving he presented her with his first watch, and a miniature by Kay of
+Edinburgh, representing him with a bow and arrow in his hand and a
+profusion of hair over his shoulders. He continued to correspond with her
+at intervals. Byron was always beloved by his servants. This nurse
+afterwards married well, and during her last illness, in 1827,
+communicated to her attendant, Dr. Ewing of Aberdeen, recollections of the
+poet, from which his biographers have drawn.
+
+In the summer of 1799 he was sent to London, entrusted to the medical care
+of Dr. Baillie (brother of Joanna, the dramatist), and placed in a
+boarding school at Dulwich, under the charge of Dr. Glennie. The physician
+advised a moderation in athletic sports, which the patient in his hours of
+liberty was constantly apt to exceed. The teacher--who continued to
+cherish an affectionate remembrance of his pupil, even when he was told,
+on a visit to Geneva in 1817, that, he ought to have "made a better boy of
+him"--testifies to the alacrity with which he entered on his tasks, his
+playful good-humour with his comrades, his reading in history beyond his
+age, and his intimate acquaintance with the Scriptures. "In my study," he
+states, "he found many books open to him; among others, a set of our poets
+from Chaucer to Churchill, which I am almost tempted to say he had more
+than once perused from beginning to end." One of the books referred to was
+the _Narrative of the Shipwreck of the "Juno,"_ which contains, almost
+word for word, the account of the "two fathers," in _Don Juan_. Meanwhile
+Mrs. Byron,--whose reduced income had been opportunely augmented by a
+grant of a 300_l_. annuity from the Civil List,--after revisiting Newstead
+followed her son to London, and took up her residence in a house in
+Sloane-terrace. She was in the habit of having him with her there from
+Saturday to Monday, kept him from school for weeks, introduced him to idle
+company, and in other ways was continually hampering his progress.
+
+Byron on his accession to the peerage having become a ward in Chancery,
+was handed over by the Court to the guardianship of Lord Carlisle, nephew
+of the admiral, and son of the grand aunt of the poet. Like his mother
+this Earl aspired to be a poet, and his tragedy, _The Father's Revenge_,
+received some commendation from Dr. Johnson; but his relations with his
+illustrious kinsman were from the first unsatisfactory. In answer to Dr.
+Glennie's appeal, he exerted his authority against the interruptions to
+his ward's education; but the attempt to mend matters led to such
+outrageous exhibitions of temper that he said to the master, "I can have
+nothing more to do with Mrs. Byron; you must now manage her as you can."
+Finally, after two years of work, which she had done her best to mar, she
+herself requested his guardian to have her son removed to a public school,
+and accordingly he went to Harrow, where he remained till the autumn of
+1805. The first vacation, in the summer of 1801, is marked by his visit to
+Cheltenham, where his mother, from whom he inherited a fair amount of
+Scotch superstition, consulted a fortune-teller, who said he would be
+twice married, the second time to a foreigner.
+
+Harrow was then under the management of Dr. Joseph Drury, one of the most
+estimable of its distinguished head-masters. His account of the first
+impressions produced by his pupil, and his judicious manner of handling a
+sensitive nature, cannot with advantage be condensed. "Mr. Hanson," he
+writes, "Lord Byron's solicitor, consigned him to my care at the age of
+thirteen and a half, with remarks that his education had been neglected;
+that he was ill prepared for a public school; but that he thought there
+was a cleverness about him. After his departure I took my young disciple
+into my study, and endeavoured to bring him forward by inquiries as to his
+former amusements, employments, and associates, but with little or no
+effect, and I soon found that a wild mountain colt had been submitted to
+my management. But there was mind in his eye. In the first place, it was
+necessary to attach him to an elder boy; but the information he received
+gave him no pleasure when he heard of the advances of some much younger
+than himself. This I discovered, and assured him that he should not be
+placed till by diligence he might rank with those of his own age. His
+manner and temper soon convinced me that he might be led by a silken
+string to a point, rather than a cable: on that principle I acted."
+
+After a time, Dr. Drury tells us that he waited on Lord Carlisle, who
+wished to give some information about his ward's property and to inquire
+respecting his abilities, and continues: "On the former circumstance I
+made no remark; as to the latter I replied, 'He has talents, my lord,
+which will add lustre to his rank.' 'Indeed!' said his lordship, with a
+degree of surprise that, according to my feeling, did not express in it
+all the satisfaction I expected." With, perhaps, unconscious humour on the
+part of the writer, we are left in doubt as to whether the indifference
+proceeded from the jealousy that clings to poetasters, from incredulity,
+or a feeling that no talent could add lustre to rank.
+
+In 1804 Byron refers to the antipathy his mother had to his guardian.
+Later he expresses gratitude for some unknown service, in recognition of
+which the second edition of the _Hours of Idleness_ was dedicated "by his
+obliged ward and affectionate kinsman," to Lord Carlisle. The tribute
+being coldly received, led to fresh estrangement, and when Byron, on his
+coming of age, wrote to remind the Earl of the fact, in expectation of
+being introduced to the House of Peers, he had for answer a mere formal
+statement of its rules. This rebuff affected him as Addison's praise of
+Tickell affected Pope, and the following lines, were published in the
+March of the same year:--
+
+ Lords too are bards! such things at times befall,
+ And 'tis some praise in peers to write at all.
+ Yet did or taste or reason sway the times,
+ Ah! who would take their titles with their rhymes.
+ Roscommon! Sheffield! with your spirits fled,
+ No future laurels deck a noble head;
+ No muse will cheer, with renovating smile
+ The paralytic puling of Carlisle.
+
+In prose he adds, "If, before I escaped from my teens, I said anything in
+favour of his lordship's paper-books, it was in the way of dutiful
+dedication, and more from the advice of others than my own judgment; and I
+seize the first opportunity of pronouncing my sincere recantation." As was
+frequently the case with him, he recanted again. In a letter of 1814 he
+expressed to Rogers his regret for his sarcasms; and in his reference to
+the death of the Hon. Frederick Howard, in the third canto of _Childe
+Harold_, he tried to make amends in the lines--
+
+ Yet one I would select from that proud throng,
+ Partly because they blend me with his line,
+ And partly that I did his sire some wrong.
+
+This is all of any interest we know regarding the fitful connection of the
+guardian and ward.
+
+Towards Dr. Drury the poet continued through life to cherish sentiments of
+gratitude, and always spoke of him with veneration. "He was," he says,
+"the best, the kindest (and yet strict too) friend I ever had; and I look
+on him still as a father, whose warnings I have remembered but too well,
+though too late, when I have erred, and whose counsel I have but followed
+when I have done well or wisely."
+
+Great educational institutions must consult the greatest good of the
+greatest number of common-place minds, by regulations against which genius
+is apt to kick; and Byron, who was by nature and lack of discipline
+peculiarly ill fitted to conform to routine, confesses that till the last
+year and a half he hated Harrow. He never took kindly to the studies of
+the place, and was at no time an accurate scholar. In the _Bards and
+Reviewers_, and elsewhere, he evinces considerable familiarity with the
+leading authors of antiquity, but it is doubtful whether he was able to
+read any of the more difficult of them in the original. His translations
+are generally commonplace, and from the marks on his books he must have
+often failed to trust his memory for the meanings of the most ordinary
+Greek words. To the well-known passage in _Childe Harold_ on Soracte and
+the "Latian echoes" he appends a prose comment, which preserves its
+interest as hearing on recent educational controversies:--"I wish to
+express that we become tired of the task before we can comprehend the
+beauty; that we learn by rote, before we get by heart; that the freshness
+is worn away, and the future pleasure and advantage deadened and
+destroyed, at an age when we can neither feel nor understand the power of
+composition, which it requires an acquaintance with life, as well as Latin
+and Greek, to relish or to reason upon.... In some parts of the continent
+young persons are taught from common authors, and do not read the best
+classics till their maturity."
+
+Comparatively slight stress was then laid on modern languages. Byron
+learnt to read French with fluency, as he certainly made himself familiar
+with the great works of the eighteenth century; but he spoke it with so
+little ease or accuracy that the fact was always a stumbling-block to his
+meeting Frenchmen abroad. Of German he had a mere smattering. Italian was
+the only language, besides his own, of which he was ever a master. But the
+extent and variety of his general reading was remarkable. His list of
+books, drawn up in 1807, includes more history and biography than most men
+of education read during a long life; a fair load of philosophy; the poets
+en masse; among orators, Demosthenes, Cicero, and Parliamentary debates
+from the Revolution to the year 1742; pretty copious divinity, including
+Blair, Tillotson, Hooker, with the characteristic addition--"all very
+tiresome. I abhor books of religion, though I reverence and love my God
+without the blasphemous notions of sectaries." Lastly, under the head of
+"Miscellanies" we have _Spectator, Rambler, World, &c., &c_; among novels,
+the works of Cervantes, Fielding, Smollett, Richardson, Mackenzie, Sterne,
+Rabelais, and Rousseau. He recommends Burton's _Anatomy of Melancholy_ as
+the best storehouse for second-hand quotations, as Sterne and others have
+found it, and tells us that the great part of the books named were perused
+before the age of fifteen. Making allowance for the fact that most of the
+poet's autobiographic sketches are emphatically _"Dichtang und Wahrheit,"_
+we can believe that he was an omnivorous reader--"I read eating, read in
+bed, read when no one else reads"--and, having a memory only less
+retentive than Macaulay's, acquired so much general information as to be
+suspected of picking it up from Reviews. He himself declares that he never
+read a Review till he was eighteen years old--when, he himself wrote one,
+utterly worthless, on Wordsworth.
+
+At Harrow, Byron proved himself capable of violent fits of work, but of
+"few continuous drudgeries." He would turn out an unusual number of
+hexameters, and again lapse into as much idleness as the teachers would
+tolerate. His forte was in declamation: his attitude and delivery, and
+power of extemporizing, surprised even critical listeners into unguarded
+praise. "My qualities," he says, "were much more oratorical and martial
+than poetical; no one had the least notion that I should subside into
+poesy." Unpopular at first, he began to like school when he had fought his
+way to be a champion, and from his energy in sports more than from the
+impression produced by his talents had come to be recognized as a leader
+among his fellows. Unfortunately, towards the close of his course, in
+1805, the headship of Harrow changed hands. Dr. Drury retired, and was
+succeeded by Dr. Butler. This event suggested the lines beginning,--
+
+ Where are those honours, Ida, once your own,
+ When Probus fill'd your magisterial throne?
+
+The appointment was generally unpopular among the boys, whose sympathies
+were enlisted in favour of Mark Drury, brother of their former master, and
+Dr. Butler seems for a time to have had considerable difficulty in
+maintaining discipline. Byron, always "famous for rowing," was a
+ringleader of the rebellious party, and compared himself to Tyrlaeus. On
+one occasion he tore down the window gratings in a room of the
+school-house, with the remark that they darkened the hall; on another he
+is reported to have refused a dinner invitation from the master, with the
+impertinent remark that he would never think of asking him in return to
+dine at Newstead. On the other hand, he seems to have set limits to the
+mutiny, and prevented some of the boys from setting their desks on fire by
+pointing to their fathers' names carved on them. Byron afterwards
+expressed regret for his rudeness; but Butler remains in his verse as
+Pomposus "of narrow brain, yet of a narrower soul."
+
+Of the poet's free hours, during the last years of his residence which he
+refers to as among the happiest of his life, many were spent in solitary
+musing by an elm-tree, near a tomb to which his name has been given--a
+spot commanding a far view of London, of Windsor "bosomed high in tufted
+trees," and of the green fields that stretch between, covered in spring
+with the white and red snow of apple blossom. The others were devoted to
+the society of his chosen comrades. Byron, if not one of the safest, was
+one of the warmest of friends; and he plucked the more eagerly at the
+choicest fruit of English public school and college life, from the feeling
+he so pathetically expresses,--
+
+ Is there no cause beyond the common claim,
+ Endear'd to all in childhood's very name?
+ Ah, sure some stronger impulse vibrates here,
+ Which whispers Friendship will be doubly dear
+ To one who thus for kindred hearts must roam,
+ And seek abroad the love denied at home.
+ Those hearts, dear Ida, have I found in thee--
+ A home, a world, a paradise to me.
+
+Of his Harrow intimates, the most prominent were the Duke of Dorset, the
+poet's favoured fag; Lord Clare (the Lycus of the _Childish
+Recollections_); Lord Delawarr (the Euryalus); John Wingfield (Alonzo),
+who died at Coimbra, 1811; Cecil Tattersall (Davus); Edward Noel Long
+(Cleon); Wildman, afterwards proprietor of Newstead; and Sir Robert Peel.
+Of the last, his form-fellow and most famous of his mates, the story is
+told of his being unmercifully beaten for offering resistance to his fag
+master, and Byron rushing up to intercede with an offer to take half the
+blows. Peel was an exact contemporary, having been born in the same year,
+1788. It has been remarked that most of the poet's associates were his
+juniors, and, less fairly, that he liked to regard them as his satellites.
+But even at Dulwich his ostentation of rank had provoked for him the
+nickname of "the old English baron." To Wildman, who, as a senior, had a
+right of inflicting chastisement for offences, he said, "I find you have
+got Delawarr on your list; pray don't lick him." "Why not?" was the reply.
+"Why, I don't know, except that he is a brother peer." Again, he
+interfered with the more effectual arm of physical force to rescue a
+junior protege--lame like himself, and otherwise much weaker--from the
+ill-treatment of some hulking tyrant. "Harness," he said, "if any one
+bullies you, tell me, and I'll thrash him if I can;" and he kept his word.
+Harness became an accomplished clergyman and minor poet, and has left some
+pleasing reminiscences of his former patron. The prodigy of the school,
+George Sinclair, was in the habit of writing the poet's exercises, and
+getting his battles fought for him in return. His bosom friend was Lord
+Clare. To him his confidences were most freely given, and his most
+affectionate verses addressed. In the characteristic stanzas entitled
+"L'amitie est l'amour sans ailes," we feel as if between them the
+qualifying phrase might have been omitted: for their letters, carefully
+preserved on either side, are a record of the jealous complaints and the
+reconciliations of lovers. In 1821 Byron writes, "I never hear the name
+Clare without a beating of the heart even now; and I write it with the
+feelings of 1803-4-5, ad infinitum." At the same date he says of an
+accidental meeting: "It annihilated for a moment all the years between the
+present time and the days of Harrow. It was a new and inexplicable
+feeling, like a rising from the grave to me. Clare too was much
+agitated--more in appearance than I was myself--for I could feel his heart
+beat to his fingers' ends, unless, indeed, it was the pulse of my own
+which made me think so. We were but five minutes together on the public
+road, but I hardly recollect an hour of my existence that could be weighed
+against them." They were "all that brothers should be but the name;" and
+it is interesting to trace this relationship between the greatest genius
+of the new time and the son of the statesman who, in the preceding age,
+stands out serene and strong amid the swarm of turbulent rioters and
+ranting orators by whom he was surrounded and reviled.
+
+Before leaving Harrow the poet had passed through the experience of a
+passion of another kind, with a result that unhappily coloured his life.
+Accounts differ as to his first meeting with Mary Ann Chaworth, the
+heiress of the family whose estates adjoined his own, and daughter of the
+race that had held with his such varied relations. In one of his letters
+ho dates the introduction previous to his trip to Cheltenham, but it seems
+not to have ripened into intimacy till a later period. Byron, who had, in
+the autumn of 1802, visited his mother at Bath, joined in a masquerade
+there and attracted attention by the liveliness of his manners. In the
+following year Mrs. Byron again settled at Nottingham, and in the course
+of a second and longer visit to her he frequently passed the night at the
+Abbey, of which Lord Grey de Ruthyn was then a temporary tenant. This was
+the occasion of his renewing his acquaintance with the Chaworths, who
+invited him to their seat at Annesley. He used at first to return every
+evening to Newstead, giving the excuse that the family pictures would come
+down and take revenge on him for his grand-uncle's deed, a fancy repeated
+in the _Siege of Corinth_. Latterly he consented to stay at Annesley,
+which thus became his headquarters during the remainder of the holidays of
+1803. The rest of the six weeks were mainly consumed in an excursion to
+Matlock and Castleton, in the same companionship. This short period, with
+the exception of prologue and epilogue, embraced the whole story of his
+first real love. Byron was on this occasion in earnest; he wished to marry
+Miss Chaworth, an event which, he says, would have "joined broad lands,
+healed an old feud, and satisfied at least one heart."
+
+The intensity of his passion is suggestively brought before us in an
+account of his crossing the Styx of the Peak cavern, alone with the lady
+and the Charon of the boat. In the same passage he informs us that he had
+never told his love; but that she had discovered--it is obvious that she
+never returned--it. We have another vivid picture of his irritation when
+she was waltzing in his presence at Matlock; then an account of their
+riding together in the country on their return to the family residence;
+again, of his bending over the piano as she was playing the Welsh air of
+"Mary Anne;" and lastly, of his overhearing her heartless speech to her
+maid, which first opened his eyes to the real state of affairs--"Do you
+think I could care for that lame boy?"--upon which he rushed out of the
+house, and ran, like a hunted creature, to Newstead. Thence he shortly
+returned from the rougher school of life to his haunts and tasks at
+Harrow. A year later the pair again met to take farewell, on the hill of
+Annesley--an incident he has commemorated in two short stanzas, that have
+the sound of a wind moaning over a moor. "I suppose," he said, "the next
+time I see you, you will be Mrs. Chaworth?" "I hope so," she replied (her
+betrothed, Mr. Musters, had agreed to assume her family name). The
+announcement of her marriage, which took place in August, 1805, was made
+to him by his mother, with the remark, "I have some news for you. Take out
+your handkerchief; you will require it." On hearing what she had to say,
+with forced calm he turned the conversation to other subjects; but he was
+long haunted by a loss which he has made the theme of many of his verses.
+In 1807 he sent to the lady herself the lines beginning,--
+
+ O had my fate been join'd with thine.
+
+In the following year he accepted an invitation to dine at Annesley, and
+was visibly affected by the sight of the infant daughter of Mrs. Chaworth,
+to whom he addressed a touching congratulation. Shortly afterwards, when
+about to leave England for the first time, he finally addressed her in the
+stanzas,--
+
+ 'Tis done, and shivering in the gale,
+ The bark unfurls her snowy sail.
+
+Some years later, having an opportunity of revisiting the family of his
+successful rival, Mrs. Leigh dissuaded him. "Don't go," she said, "for if
+you do you will certainly fall in love again, and there will be a scene."
+The romance of the story culminates in the famous _Dream_, a poem of
+unequal merit, but containing passages of real pathos, written in the year
+1816 at Diodati, as we are told, amid a flood of tears.
+
+Miss Chaworth's attractions, beyond those of personal beauty, seem to have
+been mainly due--a common occurrence--to the poet's imagination. A young
+lady, two years his senior, of a lively and volatile temper, she enjoyed
+the stolen interviews at the gate between the grounds, and laughed at the
+ardent letters, passed through a confidant, of the still awkward youth
+whom she regarded as a boy. She had no intuition to divine the presence,
+or appreciate the worship, of one of the future master-minds of England,
+nor any ambition to ally herself with the wild race of Newstead, and
+preferred her hale, commonplace, fox-hunting squire. "She was the beau
+ideal," says Byron, in his first accurate prose account of the affair,
+written 1823, a few days before his departure for Greece, "of all that my
+youthful fancy could paint of beautiful. And I have taken all my fables
+about the celestial nature of women from the perfection my imagination
+created in her. I say created; for I found her, like the rest of the sex,
+anything but angelic."
+
+Mrs. Musters (her husband re-asserted his right to his own name) had in
+the long-run reason to regret her choice. The ill-assorted pair after some
+unhappy years resolved on separation; and falling into bad health and
+worse spirits, the "bright morning star of Annesley" passed under a cloud
+of mental darkness. She died, in 1832, of fright caused by a Nottingham
+riot. On the decease of Musters, in 1850, every relic of her ancient
+family was sold by auction and scattered to the winds.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+
+CAMBRIDGE, AND FIRST PERIOD OF AUTHORSHIP.
+
+In October, 1805, on the advice of Dr. Drury, Byron was removed to Trinity
+College, Cambridge, and kept up a connexion with the University for less
+than three years of very irregular attendance, during which we hear
+nothing of his studies, except the contempt for them expressed in some of
+the least effective passages of his early satires. He came into residence
+in bad temper and low spirits. His attachment to Harrow characteristically
+redoubled as the time drew near to leave it, and his rest was broken "for
+the last quarter, with counting the hours that remained." He was about to
+start by himself, with the heavy feeling that he was no longer a boy, and
+yet, against his choice, for he wished to go to Oxford. The _Hours of
+Idleness_, the product of this period, are fairly named. He was so idle as
+regards "problems mathematic," and "barbarous Latin," that it is matter of
+surprise to learn that he was able to take his degree, as he did in March,
+1808.
+
+A good German critic, dwelling on the comparatively narrow range of
+studies to which the energies of Cambridge were then mainly directed, adds
+somewhat rashly, that English national literature stands for the most part
+beyond the range of the academic circle, This statement is often
+reiterated with persistent inaccuracy; but the most casual reference to
+biography informs us that at least four-fifths of the leading statesmen,
+reformers, and philosophers of England, have been nurtured within the
+walls of her universities, and cherished a portion of their spirit. From
+them have sprung the intellectual fires that have, at every crisis of our
+history, kindled the nation into a new life; from the age of Wycliffe,
+through those of Latimer, Locke, Gibbon, Macaulay, to the present reign of
+the Physicists, comparatively few of the motors of their age have been
+wholly "without the academic circle." Analysing with the same view the
+lives of the British poets of real note from Barbour to Tennyson, we find
+the proportion of University men increases. "Poeta nascitur et fit;" and
+if the demands of technical routine have sometimes tended to stifle, the
+comparative repose of a seclusion "unravaged" by the fierce activities
+around it, the habit of dwelling on the old wisdom and harping on the
+ancient strings, is calculated to foster the poetic temper and enrich its
+resources. The discouraging effect of a sometimes supercilious and
+conservative criticism is not an unmixed evil. The verse-writer who can be
+snuffed out by the cavils of a tutorial drone, is a poetaster silenced for
+his country's good. It is true, however, that to original minds, bubbling
+with spontaneity, or arrogant with the consciousness of power, the
+discipline is hard, and the restraint excessive; and that the men whom
+their colleges are most proud to remember, have handled them severely.
+Bacon inveighs against the scholastic trifling of his day; Milton talks of
+the waste of time on litigious brawling; Locke mocks at the logic of the
+schools; Cowley complains of being taught words, not things; Gibbon
+rejoices over his escape from the port and prejudice of Magdalen;
+Wordsworth contemns the "trade in classic niceties," and roves "in
+magisterial liberty" by the Cam, as afterwards among the hills.
+
+But all those hostile critics owe much to the object of their
+animadversion. Any schoolboy can refer the preference of Light to Fruit in
+the _Novum Organum_, half of _Comus_ and _Lycidas_, the stately periods of
+the _Decline and Fall_, and the severe beauties of _Laodamia_, to the
+better influences of academic training on the minds of their authors.
+Similarly, the richest pages of Byron's work--from the date of _The Curse
+of Minerva_ to that of the "Isles of Greece"--are brightened by lights and
+adorned by allusions due to his training, imperfect as it was, on the
+slopes of Harrow, and the associations fostered during his truant years by
+the sluggish stream of his "Injusta noverca." At her, however, he
+continued to rail as late as the publication of _Beppo_, in the 75th and
+76th stanzas of which we find another cause of complaint,--
+
+ One hates an author that's all author, fellows
+ In foolscap uniforms turn'd up with ink--
+ So very anxious, clever, fine, and jealous,
+ One don't know what to say to them, or think.
+
+Then, after commending Scott, Bogers, and Moore for being men of the
+world, he proceeds:--
+
+ But for the children of the "mighty mother's,"
+ The would-be wits and can't-be gentlemen,
+ I leave them to the daily "Tea is ready,"
+ Snug coterie, and literary lady.
+
+This attack, which called forth a counter invective of unusual ferocity
+from some unknown scribbler, is the expression of a sentiment which, sound
+enough within limits, Byron pushed to an extreme. He had a rooted dislike,
+of professional _litterateurs_, and was always haunted by a dread that
+they would claim equality with him on the common ground of authorship. He
+aspired through life to the superiority of a double distinction, that of a
+"lord among wits, and among wits a lord." In this same spirit lie resented
+the comparison frequently made between him and Rousseau, and insisted on
+points of contrast. "He had a bad memory, I a good one. He was of the
+people; I of the aristocracy." Byron was capable, of unbending, where the
+difference of rank was so great that it could not be ignored. On this
+principle we may explain his enthusiastic regard for the chorister
+Eddlestone, from whom he received the cornelian that is the theme of some
+of his verses, and whose untimely death in 1811 he sincerely mourned.
+
+Of his Harrow friends, Harness and Long in due course followed him to
+Cambridge, where their common pursuits were renewed. With the latter, who
+was drowned in 1809, on a passage to Lisbon with his regiment, he spent a
+considerable portion of his time on the Cam, swimming and diving, in which
+art they were so expert as to pick up eggs, plates, thimbles, and coins
+from a depth of fourteen feet--incidents recalled to the poet's mind by
+reading Milton's invocation to Sabrina. During the, same period he
+distinguished himself at cricket, as in boxing, riding, and shooting. Of
+his skill as a rider there are various accounts. He was an undoubted
+marksman, and his habit of carrying about pistols, and use of them
+wherever he went, was often a source of annoyance and alarm. He professed
+a theoretical objection to duelling, but was as ready to take a challenge
+as Scott, and more ready to send one.
+
+Regarding the masters and professors of Cambridge, Byron has little to
+say. His own tutor, Tavell, appears pleasantly enough in his verse, and he
+commends the head of his college, Dr. Lort Mansel, for dignified demeanour
+in his office, and a past reputation for convivial wit. His attentions to
+Professor Hailstones at Harrowgate were graciously offered and received;
+but in a letter to Murray he gives a graphically abusive account of
+Porson, "hiccuping Greek like a Helot" in his cups. The poet was first
+introduced at Cambridge to a brilliant circle of contemporaries, whose
+talents or attainments soon made them more or less conspicuous, and most
+of whom are interesting on their own account as well as from their
+connection with the subsequent phases of his career. By common consent
+Charles Skinner Matthews, son of the member for Herefordshire, 1802-6, was
+the most remarkable of the group. Distinguished alike for scholarship,
+physical and mental courage, subtlety of thought, humour of fancy, and
+fascinations of character, this young man seems to have made an impression
+on the undergraduates of his own, similar to that left by Charles Austin
+on those of a later generation. The loss of this friend Byron always
+regarded as an incalculable calamity. In a note to _Childe Harold_ he
+writes, "I should have ventured on a verse to the memory of Matthews, were
+he not too much above all praise of mine. His powers of mind shown in the
+attainment of greater honours against the ablest candidates, than those of
+any graduate on record at Cambridge, have sufficiently established his
+fame on the spot where it was acquired; while his softer qualities live in
+the recollection of friends, who loved him too well to envy his
+superiority." He was drowned when bathing alone among the reeds of the
+Cam, in the summer of 1811.
+
+In a letter written from Ravenna in 1820, Byron, in answer to a request
+for contributions to a proposed memoir, introduces into his notes much
+autobiographical matter. In reference to a joint visit to Newstead, he
+writes: "Matthews and myself had travelled down from London together,
+talking all the way incessantly upon one single topic. When we got to
+Loughborough, I know not what chasm had made us diverge for a moment to
+some other subject, at which he was indignant. 'Come,' said he, 'don't let
+us break through; let us go on as we began, to our journey's end;' and so
+he continued, and was as entertaining as ever to the very end. He had
+previously occupied, during my year's absence from Cambridge, my rooms in
+Trinity, with the furniture; and Jones (his tutor), in his odd way had
+said, in putting him in, 'Mr. Matthews, I recommend to your attention not
+to damage any of the movables, for Lord Byron, sir, is a young man of
+_tumultuous passions_.' Matthews was delighted with this, and whenever
+anybody came, to visit him, begged them to handle the very door with
+caution, and used to repeat Jones's admonition in his tone and manner....
+He had the same droll sardonic way about everything. A wild Irishman,
+named F., one evening beginning to say something at a large supper,
+Matthews roared 'Silence!' and then pointing to F., cried out, in the
+words of the oracle, 'Orson is endowed with reason.' When Sir Henry Smith
+was expelled from Cambridge for a row with a tradesman named 'Hiron,'
+Matthews solaced himself with shouting under Hiron's windows every
+evening--
+
+ Ah me! what perils do environ
+ The man who meddles with hot Hiron!
+
+He was also of that band of scoffers who used to rouse Lort Mansel from
+his slumbers in the lodge of Trinity; and when he appeared at the window,
+foaming with wrath, and crying out, "I know you, gentlemen; I know you!"
+were wont to reply, "We beseech thee to hear us, good Lort. Good Lort,
+deliver us!"
+
+The whole letter, written in the poet's mature and natural style, gives a
+vivid picture of the social life and surroundings of his Cambridge days:
+how much of the set and sententious moralizing of some of his formal
+biographers might we not have spared, for a report of the conversation on
+the road from London to Newstead. Of the others gathered round the same
+centre, Scrope Davies enlisted the largest share of Byron's affections. To
+him he wrote after the catastrophe:--"Come to me, Scrope; I am almost
+desolate--left alone in the world. I had but you, and H., and M., and let
+me enjoy the survivors while I can." Later he says, "Matthews, Davies,
+Hobhouse, and myself formed a coterie of our own. Davies has always beaten
+us all in the war of words, and by colloquial powers at once delighted and
+kept us in order; even M. yielded to the dashing vivacity of S.D." The
+last is everywhere commended for the brilliancy of his wit and repartee:
+he was never afraid to speak the truth. Once when the poet in one of his
+fits of petulance exclaimed, intending to produce a terrible impression,
+"I shall go mad!" Davies calmly and cuttingly observed, "It is much more
+like silliness than madness!" He was the only man who ever laid Byron
+under any serious pecuniary obligation, having lent him 4800_l_. in some
+time of strait. This was repaid on March 27, 1814, when the pair sat up
+over champagne and claret from six till midnight, after which "Scrope
+could not be got into the carriage on the way home, but remained tipsy and
+pious on his knees." Davies was much disconcerted at the influence which
+the sceptical opinions of Matthews threatened to exercise over Byron's
+mind. The fourth of this quadrangle of amity was John Cam Hobhouse,
+afterwards Lord Broughton, the steadfast friend of the poet's whole life,
+the companion of his travels, the witness of his marriage, the executor of
+his will, the zealous guardian and vindicator of his fame. His ability is
+abundantly attested by the impression he left on his contemporaries, his
+published description of the Pilgrimage, and subsequent literary and
+political career. Byron bears witness to the warmth of his affections, and
+the charms of his conversation, and to the candour which, as he confessed
+to Lady Blessington, sometimes tried his patience. There is little doubt
+that they had some misunderstanding when travelling together, but it was a
+passing cloud. Eighteen months after his return the poet admits that
+Hobhouse was his best friend; and when he unexpectedly walked up the
+stairs of the Palazzo Lanfranchi, at Pisa, Madame Guiccioli informs us
+that Byron was seized with such violent emotion, and so extreme an excess
+of joy, that it seemed to take away his strength, and he was forced to sit
+down in tears.
+
+On the edge of this inner circle, and in many respects associated with it,
+was the Rev. Francis Hodgson, a ripe scholar, good translator, a sound
+critic, a fluent writer of graceful verse, and a large-hearted divine,
+whoso correspondence, recently edited with a connecting narrative by his
+son, has thrown light on disputed passages of Lord Byron's life. The views
+entertained by the friends on literary matters were almost identical; they
+both fought under the standards of the classic school; they resented the
+same criticisms, they applauded the same successes, and were bound
+together by the strong tie of mutual admiration. Byron commends Hodgson's
+verses, and encourages him to write; Hodgson recognizes in the _Bards and
+Reviewers_ and the early cantos of _Childe Harold_ the promise of
+_Manfred_ and _Cain_. Among the associates who strove to bring the poet
+back to the anchorage of fixed belief, and to wean him from the error of
+his thoughts, Francis Hodgson was the most charitable, and therefore the
+most judicious. That his cautions and exhortations were never stultified
+by pedantry or excessive dogmatism, is apparent from the frank and
+unguarded answers which they called forth. In several, which are
+preserved, and some for the first time reproduced in the
+recently-published Memoir, we are struck by the mixture of audacity and
+superficial dogmatism, sometimes amounting to effrontery, that is apt to
+characterize the negations of a youthful sceptic. In September, 1811,
+Byron writes from Newstead:--"I will have nothing to do with your
+immortality; we are miserable enough in this life, without the absurdity
+of speculating upon another. Christ came to save men, but a good Pagan
+will go to heaven, and a bad Nazarene to hell. I am no Platonist, I am
+nothing at all; but I would sooner be a Paulician, Manichean, Spinozist,
+Gentile, Pyrrhonian, Zoroastrian, than one of the seventy-two villainous
+sects who are tearing each other to pieces for the love of the Lord and
+hatred of each other. I will bring ten Mussulman, shall shame you all in
+good will towards men and prayer to God." On a similar outburst in verse,
+the Rev. F. Hodgson comments with a sweet humanity, "The poor dear soul
+meant nothing of this." Elsewhere the poet writes, "I have read Watson to
+Gibbon. He proves nothing; so I am where I was, verging towards Spinoza;
+and yet it is a gloomy creed; and I want a better; but there is something
+pagan in me that I cannot shake off. _In short, I deny nothing, but I
+doubt everything_." But his early attitude on matters of religion is best
+set forth in a letter to Gilford, of 1813, in which he says, "I am no
+bigot to infidelity, and did not expect that because I doubted the
+immortality of man I should be charged with denying the existence of a
+God. It was the comparative insignificance of ourselves and our world,
+when placed in comparison of the mighty whole of which man is an atom,
+that first led me to imagine that our pretensions to eternity might be
+overrated. This, and being early disgusted with a Calvinistic Scotch
+school, where I was cudgelled to church for the first ten years of my
+life, afflicted me with this malady; for, after all, it is, I believe, a
+disease of the mind, as much as other kinds of hypochondria."
+
+Hodgson was a type of friendly forbearance and loyal attachment, which
+had for their return a perfect open-heartedness in his correspondent. To
+no one did the poet more freely abuse himself; to no one did he indulge in
+more reckless sallies of humour; to no one did he more readily betray his
+little conceits. From him Byron sought and received advice, and he owed to
+him the prevention of what might have been a most foolish and disastrous
+encounter. On the other hand, the clergyman was the recipient of one of
+the poet's many single-hearted acts of munificence--a gift of 1000_l_., to
+pay off debts to which he had been left heir. In a letter to his uncle,
+the former gratefully alludes to this generosity: "Oh, if you knew the
+exultation of heart, aye, and of head to, I feel at being free from those
+depressing embarrassments, you would, as I do, bless my dearest friend and
+brother, Byron." The whole transaction is a pleasing record of a benefit
+that was neither sooner nor later resented by the receiver.
+
+Among other associates of the same group should be mentioned Henry
+Drury--long Hodgson's intimate friend, and ultimately his brother-in-law,
+to whom many of Byron's first series of letters from abroad are
+addressed--and Robert Charles Dallas, a name surrounded with various
+associations, who played a not insignificant part in Byron's history, and,
+after his death, helped to swell the throng of his annotators. This
+gentleman, a connexion by marriage, and author of some now forgotten
+novels, first made acquaintance with the poet in London early in 1808,
+when we have two letters from Byron, in answer to some compliment on his
+early volume, in which, though addressing his correspondent merely as
+'Sir,' his flippancy and habit of boasting of excessive badness reach an
+absurd climax.
+
+Meanwhile, during the intervals of his attendance at college, Byron had
+made other friends. His vacations were divided between London and
+Southwell, a small town on the road from Mansfield and Newark, once a
+refuge of Charles I., and still adorned by an old Norman Minster. Here
+Mrs. Byron for several summer seasons took up her abode, and was
+frequently joined by her son. He was introduced to John Pigot, a medical
+student of Edinburgh, and his sister Elizabeth, both endowed with talents
+above the average, and keenly interested in literary pursuits, to whom a
+number of his letters are addressed; also to the Rev. J.T. Becher, author
+of a treatise on the state of the poor, to whom he was indebted for
+encouragement and counsel. The poet often rails at the place, which he
+found dull in comparison with Cambridge and London; writing from the
+latter, in 1807: "O Southwell, how I rejoice to have left thee! and how I
+curse the heavy hours I dragged along for so many months among the Mohawks
+who inhabit your kraals!" and adding, that his sole satisfaction during
+his residence there was having pared off some pounds of flush.
+Notwithstanding, in the small but select society of this inland
+watering-place he passed on the whole a pleasant time--listening to the
+music of the simple ballads in which he delighted, taking part in the
+performances of the local theatre, making excursions, and writing verses.
+This otherwise quiet time was disturbed by exhibitions of violence on the
+part of Mrs. Byron, which suggest the idea of insanity. After one more
+outrageous than usual, both mother and son are said to have gone to the
+neighbouring apothecary, each to request him not to supply the other with
+poison. On a later occasion, when he had been meeting her bursts of rage
+with stubborn mockery, she flung a poker at his head, and narrowly missed
+her aim. Upon this he took flight to London, and his Hydra or Alecto, as
+ho calls her, followed: on their meeting a truce was patched, and they
+withdrew in opposite directions, she back to Southwell, he to refresh
+himself on the Sussex coast, till in the August of the same year (1806) he
+again rejoined her. Shortly afterwards we have from Pigot a description of
+a trip to Harrogate, when his lordship's favourite Newfoundland,
+Boatswain, whose relation to his master recalls that of Bounce to Pope, or
+Maida to Scott, sat on the box.
+
+In November Byron printed for private circulation the first issue of his
+juvenile poems. Mr. Becher having called his attention to one which he
+thought objectionable, the impression was destroyed; and the author set to
+work upon another, which, at once weeded and amplified, saw the light in
+January, 1807. He sent copies, under the title of _Juvenilia_, to several
+of his friends, and among others to Henry Mackenzie (the Man of Feeling),
+and to Fraser Tytler, Lord Woodhouselee. Encouraged by their favourable
+notices, he determined in appeal to a wider audience, and in March, 1807,
+the _Hours of Idleness_, still proceeding from the local press at Newark,
+were given to the world. In June we find the poet again writing from his
+college rooms, dwelling with boyish detail on his growth in height and
+reduction in girth, his late hours and heavy potations, his comrades, and
+the prospects of his book. From July to September he dates from London,
+excited by the praises of some now obscure magazine, and planning a
+journey to the Hebrides. In October he is again settled at Cambridge, and
+in a letter to Miss Pigot, makes a humorous reference to one of his
+fantastic freaks: "I have got a new friend, the finest in the world--a
+_tame bear_. When I brought him here, they asked me what I meant to do
+with him, and my reply was, 'He should sit for a fellowship.' This answer
+delighted them not." The greater part of the spring and summer of 1808 was
+spent at Dorant's Hotel, Albemarle Street. Left to himself, he seems
+during this period for the first time to have freely indulged in
+dissipations, which are in most lives more or less carefully concealed.
+But Byron, with almost unparalleled folly, was perpetually taking the
+public into his confidence, and all his "sins of blood," with the strange
+additions of an imaginative effrontery, have been thrust before us in a
+manner in which Rochester or Rousseau might have thought indelicate.
+Nature and circumstances conspired the result. With passions which he is
+fond of comparing to the fires of Vesuvius and Hecla, he was, on his
+entrance into a social life which his rank helped to surround with
+temptations, unconscious of any sufficient motive for resisting them; he
+had no one to restrain him from the whim of the moment, or with sufficient
+authority to give him effective advice. A temperament of general
+despondency, relieved by reckless outbursts of animal spirits, is the
+least favourable to habitual self-control. The melancholy of Byron was not
+of the pensive and innocent kind attributed to Cowley, rather that of the,
+[Greek: melancholikoi] of whom Aristotle asserts, with profound
+psychological or physiological intuition, that they are [Greek: aei en
+sphodra orexei]. The absurdity of Moore's frequent declaration, that all
+great poets are inly wrapt in perpetual gloom, is only to be excused by
+the modesty which, in the saying so obviously excludes himself from the
+list. But it is true that anomalous energies are sources of incessant
+irritation to their possessor, until they have found their proper vent in
+the free exercise of his highest faculties. Byron had not yet done, this,
+when he was rushing about between London, Brighton, Cambridge, and
+Newstead--shooting, gambling, swimming, alternately drinking deep and
+trying to starve himself into elegance, green-room hunting, travelling
+with disguised companions,[1] patronizing D'Egville the dancing-master,
+Grimaldi the clown, and taking lessons from Mr. Jackson, the distinguished
+professor of pugilism, to whom he afterwards affectionately refers as his
+"old friend and corporeal pastor and master." There is no inducement to
+dwell on amours devoid of romance, further than to remember that they
+never trenched on what the common code of the fashionable world terms
+dishonour. We may believe the poet's later assertion, backed by want of
+evidence to the contrary, that he had never been the first means of
+leading any one astray--a fact perhaps worthy the attention of those moral
+worshippers of Goethe and Burns who hiss at Lord Byron's name.
+
+ [Footnote 1: In reference to one of these, see an interesting letter
+ from Mr. Minto to the _Athenaeum_ (Sept. 2nd, 1876), in which with
+ considerable though not conclusive ingenuity, he endeavours to
+ identify the girl with "Thyrza," and with "Astarte," whom he regards
+ as the same person.]
+
+Though much of this year of his life was passed unprofitably, from it
+dates the impulse that provoked him to put forth his powers. The
+_Edinburgh_, with the attack on the _Hours of Idleness_, appeared in
+March, 1808. This production, by Lord Brougham, is a specimen of the
+tomahawk style of criticism prevalent in the early years of the century,
+in which the main motive of the critic was, not to deal fairly with his
+author, but to acquire for himself an easy reputation for cleverness, by a
+series of smart contemptuous sentences. Taken apart, most of the
+strictures of the _Edinburgh_ are sufficiently just, and the passages
+quoted for censure are all bad. Byron's genius as a poet was not
+remarkably precocious. The _Hours of Idleness_ seldom rise, either in
+thought or expression, very far above the average level of juvenile verse;
+many of the pieces in the collection are weak imitations, or commonplace
+descriptions; others suggested by circumstances of local or temporary
+interest, had served their turn before coming into print. Their prevailing
+sentiment is an affectation of misanthropy, conveyed in such lines as
+these:--
+
+ Weary of love, of life, devour'd with spleen,
+ I rest, a perfect Timon, not nineteen.
+
+This mawkish element unfortunately survives in much of the author's later
+verse. But even in this volume there are indications of force, and
+command. The _Prayer of Nature_, indeed, though previously written, was
+not included in the edition before the notice of the critic; but the sound
+of _Loch-na-Gair_ and some of the stanzas on _Newstead_ ought to have
+saved him from the mistake of his impudent advice. The poet, who through
+life waited with feverish anxiety for every verdict on his work, is
+reported after reading the review to have looked like a man about to send
+a challenge. In the midst of a transparent show of indifference, he
+confesses to have drunk three bottles of claret on the evening of its
+appearance. But the wound did not mortify into torpor; the Sea-Kings'
+blood stood him in good stead, and he was not long in collecting his
+strength for the panther-like spring, which, gaining strength by its
+delay, twelve months later made it impossible for him to be contemned.
+
+The last months of the year he spent at Newstead, vacated by the tenant,
+who had left the building in the tumble-down condition in which he found
+it. Byron was, by his own acknowledgment, at this time, "heavily dipped,"
+generosities having combined with selfish extravagances to the result; he
+had no funds to subject the place to anything like a thorough repair, but
+he busied himself in arranging a few of the rooms for his own present and
+his mother's after use. About this date he writes to her, beginning in his
+usual style, "Dear Madam," saying he has as yet no rooms ready for her
+reception, but that on his departure she shall be tenant till his return.
+During this interval he was studying Pope, and carefully maturing his own
+Satire. In November the dog Boatswain died in a fit of madness. The event
+called forth the famous burst of misanthropic verse, ending with the
+couplet,--
+
+ To mark a friend's remains these stones arise;
+ I never knew but _one_, and _here_ he lies;--
+
+and the inscription on the monument that still remains in the gardens of
+Newstead,--
+
+ Near this spot,
+ Are deposited the remains of one
+ Who possessed Beauty without Vanity,
+ Strength without Insolence,
+ Courage without Ferocity,
+ And all the virtues of Man without his Vices.
+ This Praise, which would be unmeaning Flattery
+ If inscribed over human ashes,
+ Is but a just tribute to the Memory of
+ Boatswain, a Dog,
+ Who was born at Newfoundland, May, 1803,
+ And died at Newstead Abbey, November 18, 1808.
+
+On January 22, 1809, his lordship's coming of age was celebrated with
+festivities, curtailed of their proportions by his limited means. Early in
+spring he paid a visit to London, bringing the proof of his satire to the
+publisher, Cawthorne. From St. James's Street he writes to Mrs. Byron, on
+the death of Lord Falkland, who had been killed in a duel, and expresses a
+sympathy for his family, left in destitute circumstances, whom he
+proceeded to relieve with a generosity only equalled by the delicacy of
+the manner in which it was shown. Referring to his own embarrassment, he
+proceeds in the expression of a resolve, often repeated, "Come what may,
+Newstead and I stand or fall together. I have now lived on the spot--I
+have fixed my heart on it; and no pressure, present or future, shall
+induce me to barter the last vestige of our inheritance." He was building
+false hopes on the result of the suit for the Rochdale property, which,
+being dragged from court to court, involved him in heavy expenses, with no
+satisfactory result. He took his seat in the House of Lords on the 13th of
+March, and Mr. Dallas, who accompanied him to the bar of the House, has
+left an account of his somewhat unfortunate demeanour.
+
+"His countenance, paler than usual, showed that his mind was agitated, and
+that he was thinking of the nobleman to whom he had once looked for a hand
+and countenance in his introduction. There were very few persons in the
+House. Lord Eldon was going through some ordinary business. When Lord
+Byron had taken the oaths, the Chancellor quitted his seat, and went
+towards him with a smile, putting out his hand warmly to welcome him; and,
+though I did not catch the words, I saw that he paid him some compliment.
+This was all thrown away upon Lord Byron, who made a stiff bow, and put
+the tips of his fingers into the Chancellor's hand. The Chancellor did not
+press a welcome so received, but resumed his seat; while Lord Byron
+carelessly seated himself for a few minutes on one of the empty benches to
+the left of the throne, usually occupied by the lords in Opposition. When,
+on his joining me, I expressed what I had felt, he said 'If I had shaken
+hands heartily, he would have set me down for one of his party; but I will
+have nothing to do with them on either side. I have taken my seat, and now
+I will go abroad.'"
+
+A few days later the _English Bards and Scotch Reviewers_ appeared before
+the public. The first anonymous edition was exhausted in a month; a
+second, to which the author gave his name, quickly followed. He was wont
+at a later date to disparage this production, and frequently recanted many
+of his verdicts in marginal notes. Several, indeed, seem to have been
+dictated by feelings so transitory, that in the course of the correction
+of proof blame was turned into praise, and praise into blame; i.e. he
+wrote in MS. before he met the agreeable author,--
+
+ I leave topography to coxcomb Gell;
+
+we have his second thought in the first edition, before he saw the
+Troad,--
+
+ I leave topography to classic Gell;
+
+and his third, half way in censure, in the fifth,--
+
+ I leave topography to rapid Gell.
+
+Of such materials are literary judgments made!
+
+The success of Byron's satire was due to the fact of its being the only
+good thing of its kind since Churchill,--for in the _Baviad_ and _Maeviad_
+only butterflies were broken upon the wheel--and to its being the first
+promise of a now power. The _Bards and Reviewers_ also enlisted sympathy,
+from its vigorous attack upon the critics who had hitherto assumed the
+prerogative of attack. Jeffrey and Brougham were seethed in their own
+milk; and outsiders, whose credentials were still being examined, as Moore
+and Campbell, came in for their share of vigorous vituperation. The Lakers
+fared worst of all. It was the beginning of the author's life-long war,
+only once relaxed, with Southey. Wordsworth--though against this passage
+is written "unjust," a concession not much sooner made than withdrawn,--is
+dubbed an idiot, who--
+
+ Both by precept and example shows,
+ That prose is verse and verse is only prose;
+
+and Coleridge, a baby,--
+
+ To turgid ode and tumid stanza dear.
+
+The lines ridiculing the encounter between Jeffrey and Moore, are a fair
+specimen of the accuracy with which the author had caught the ring of
+Pope's antithesis:--
+
+ The surly Tolbooth scarcely kept her place.
+ The Tolbooth felt--for marble sometimes can,
+ On such occasions, feel as much as man--
+ The Tolbooth felt defrauded of her charms,
+ If Jeffrey died, except within her arms.
+
+Meanwhile Byron had again retired to Newstead, where he invited some
+choice spirits to hold a few weeks of farewell revel. Matthews, one of
+these, gives an account of the place, and the time they spent
+there--entering the mansion between a bear and a wolf, amid a salvo of
+pistol-shots; sitting up to all hours, talking politics, philosophy,
+poetry; hearing stories of the dead lords, and the ghost of the Black
+Brother; drinking their wine out of the skull cup which the owner had made
+out of the cranium of some old monk dug up in the garden; breakfasting at
+two, then reading, fencing, riding, cricketing, sailing on the lake, and
+playing with the bear or teasing the wolf. The party broke up without
+having made themselves responsible for any of the orgies of which Childe
+Harold raves, and which Dallas in good earnest accepts as veracious, when
+the poet and his friend Hobhouse started for Falmouth, on their way
+"_outre mer_."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+
+TWO YEARS OF TRAVEL.
+
+There is no romance of Munchausen or Dumas more marvellous than the
+adventures attributed to Lord Byron abroad. Attached to his first
+expedition are a series of narratives, by professing eye-witnesses, of his
+intrigues, encounters, acts of diablerie and of munificence, in particular
+of his roaming about the isles of Greece and taking possession of one of
+them, which have all the same relation to reality as the _Arabian Nights_
+to the actual reign of Haroun Al Raschid.[1]
+
+ [Footnote 1: Those who wish to read them are referred to the three
+ large volumes--published in 1825, by Mr. Iley, Portman Street--of
+ anonymous authorship.]
+
+Byron had far more than an average share of the _emigre_ spirit, the
+counterpoise in the English race of their otherwise arrogant isolation. He
+held with Wilhelm Meister--
+
+ To give space for wandering is it,
+ That the earth was made so wide.
+
+and wrote to his mother from Athens: "I am so convinced of the advantages
+of looking at mankind, instead of reading about them, and the bitter
+effects of staying at home with all the narrow prejudices of an islander,
+that I think there should be a law amongst us to send our young men abroad
+for a term, among the few allies our wars have left us."
+
+On June 11th, having borrowed money at heavy interest, and stored his mind
+with information about Persia and India, the contemplated but unattained
+goal of his travels, he left London, accompanied by his friend Hobhouse,
+Fletcher his valet, Joe Murray his old butler, and Robert Rushton the son
+of one of his tenants, supposed to be represented by the Page in _Childe
+Harold_. The two latter, the one on account of his age, the other from his
+health breaking down, he sent back to England from Gibraltar.
+
+Becalmed for some days at Falmouth, a town which he describes as "full of
+Quakers and salt fish," he despatched letters to his mother, Drury, and
+Hodgson, exhibiting the changing moods of his mind. Smarting under a
+slight he had received at parting from a school-companion, who had excused
+himself from a farewell meeting on the plea that he had to go shopping, he
+at one moment talks of his desolation, and says that, "leaving England
+without regret," he has thought of entering the Turkish service; in the
+next, especially in the stanzas to Hodgson, he runs off into a strain of
+boisterous buffoonery. On the 2nd of July, the packet, by which he was
+bound, sailed for Lisbon and arrived there about the middle of the month,
+when the English fleet was anchored in the Tagus. The poet in some of his
+stanzas has described the fine view of the port and the disconsolate
+dirtiness of the city itself, the streets of which were at that time
+rendered dangerous by the frequency of religious and political
+assassinations. Nothing else remains of his sojourn to interest us, save
+the statement of Mr. Hobhouse, that his friend made a more perilous,
+though less celebrated, achievement by water than his crossing the
+Hellespont, in swimming from old Lisbon to Belem Castle, Byron praises the
+neighbouring Cintra, as "the most beautiful village in the world," though
+he joins with Wordsworth in heaping anathemas on the Convention, and
+extols the grandeur of Mafra, the Escurial of Portugal, in the convent of
+which a monk, showing the traveller a large library, asked if the English
+had any books in their country. Despatching his baggage and servants by
+sea to Gibraltar, he and his friend started on horseback through the
+south-west of Spain. Their first resting-place, after a ride of 400 miles,
+performed at an average rate of seventy in the twenty-four hours, was
+Seville, where they lodged for three days in the house of two ladies, to
+whose attractions, as well as the fascination he seems to have exerted
+over them, the poet somewhat garrulously refers. Here, too, he saw,
+parading on the Prado, the famous _Maid of Saragossa_, whom he celebrates
+in his equally famous stanzas (_Childe Harold_, I., 54-58). Of Cadiz, the
+next stage, he writes with enthusiasm as a modern Cythera, describing the
+bull fights in his verse, and the beauties in glowing prose. The belles of
+this city, he says, are the Lancashire witches of Spain; and by reason of
+them, rather than the sea-shore or the Sierra Morena, "sweet Cadiz is the
+first spot in the creation." Hence, by an English frigate, they sailed to
+Gibraltar, for which place he has nothing but curses. Byron had no
+sympathy with the ordinary forms of British patriotism, and in our great
+struggle with the tyranny of the First Empire, he may almost be said to
+have sympathized with Napoleon.
+
+The ship stopped at Cagliari in Sardinia, and again at Girgenti on the
+Sicilian coast. Arriving at Malta, they halted there for three weeks--time
+enough to establish a sentimental, though Platonic, flirtation with Mrs.
+Spencer Smith, wife of our minister at Constantinople, sister-in-law of
+the famous admiral, and the heroine of some exciting adventures. She is
+the "Florence" of _Childe Harold_, and is afterwards addressed in some of
+the most graceful verses of his cavalier minstrelsy--
+
+ Do thou, amidst the fair white walls,
+ If Cadiz yet be free,
+ At times from out her latticed halls
+ Look o'er the dark blue sea--
+ Then think upon Calypso's isles,
+ Endear'd by days gone by,--
+ To others give a thousand smiles,
+ To me a single sigh.
+
+The only other adventure of the visit is Byron's quarrel with an officer,
+on some unrecorded ground, which Hobhouse tells us nearly resulted in a
+duel. The friends left Malta on September 29th, in the war-ship "Spider,"
+and after anchoring off Patras, and spending a few hours on shore, they
+skirted the coast of Acarnania, in view of localities--as Ithaca, the
+Leucadian rock, and Actium--whose classic memories filtered through the
+poet's mind and found a place in his masterpieces. Landing at Previsa,
+they started on a tour through Albania,--
+
+ O'er many a mount sublime,
+ Through lands scarce noticed in historic tales.
+
+Byron was deeply impressed by the beauty of the scenery, and the
+half-savage independence of the people, described as "always strutting
+about with slow dignity, though in rags." In October we find him with his
+companions at Janina, hospitably entertained by order of Ali Pasha, the
+famous Albanian Turk, bandit, and despot, then besieging Ibrahim at Berat
+in Illyria. They proceeded on their way by "bleak Pindus," Acherusia's
+lake, and Zitza, with its monastery door battered by robbers. Before
+reaching the latter place, they encountered a terrific thunderstorm, in
+the midst of which they separated, and Byron's detachment lost its way for
+nine hours, during which he composed the verses to Florence, quoted above.
+
+Some days later they together arrived at Tepaleni, and were there received
+by Ali Pasha in person. The scene on entering the town is described as
+recalling Scott's Branksome Castle and the feudal system; and the
+introduction to Ali, who sat for some of the traits of the poet's
+corsairs,--is graphically reproduced in a letter to Mrs. Byron. "His first
+question was, why at so early an age I left my country, and without a
+'lala,' or nurse? He then said the English minister had told him I was of
+a great family, and desired his respects to my mother, which I now present
+to you (date, November 12th). He said he was certain I was a man of birth,
+because I had small ears, curling hair, and little white hands. He told me
+to consider him as a father whilst I was in Turkey, and said he looked on
+me as his son. Indeed he treated me like a child, sending me almonds,
+fruit, and sweetmeats, twenty times a day." Byron shortly afterwards
+discovered his host to be, a poisoner and an assassin. "Two days ago," he
+proceeds in a passage which illustrates his character and a common
+experience, "I was nearly lost in a Turkish ship-of-war, owing to the
+ignorance of the captain and crew. Fletcher yelled after his wife; the
+Greeks called on all the saints, the Mussulmen on Alla; the captain burst
+into tears and ran below deck, telling us to call on God. The sails were
+split, the mainyard shivered, the wind blowing fresh, the night setting
+in; and all our chance was to make for Corfu--or, as F. pathetically
+called it, 'a watery grave.' I did what I could to console him, but
+finding him incorrigible, wrapped myself in my Albanian capote, and lay
+down on the deck to wait the worst." Unable from his lameness, says
+Hobhouse, to be of any assistance, he in a short time was found amid the
+trembling sailors, fast asleep. They got back to the coast of Suli, and
+shortly afterwards started through Acarnania and AEtolia for the Morea,
+again rejoicing in the wild scenery and the apparently kindred spirits of
+the wild men among whom they passed. Byron was especially fascinated by
+the firelight dance and song of the robber band, which he describes and
+reproduces in _Childe Harold_. On the 21st of November he reached
+Mesolonghi, whore, fifteen years later, he died. Here he dismissed most of
+his escort, proceeded to Patras, and on to Vostizza, caught sight of
+Parnassus, and accepted a flight of eagles near Delphi as a favouring sign
+of Apollo. "The last bird," he writes, "I ever fired at was an eaglet on
+the shore of the Gulf of Lepanto. It was only wounded and I tried to save
+it--the eye was so bright. But it pined and died in a few days: and I
+never did since, and never will, attempt the life of another bird." From
+Livadia the travellers proceeded to Thebes, visited the cave of
+Trophonius, Diana's fountain, the so-called ruins of Pindar's house, and
+the field of Cheronea, crossed Cithaeron, and on Christmas, 1809, arrived
+before the defile, near the ruins of Phyle, where, he had his first
+glimpse of Athens, which evoked the famous lines:--
+
+ Ancient of days, august Athena! where,
+ Where are thy men of might? thy grand in soul?
+ Gone, glimmering through the dream of things that were.
+ First in the race that led to glory's goal,
+ They won, and pass'd away: is this the whole--
+ A schoolboy's tale, the wonder of an hour?
+
+After which he reverts to his perpetually recurring moral, "Men come and
+go; but the hills, and waves, and skies, and stars, endure"--
+
+ Apollo still thy long, long summer gilds;
+ Still in his beam Mendeli's marbles glare;
+ Art, glory, freedom fail--but nature still is fair.
+
+The duration of Lord Byron's first visit to Athens was about three months,
+and it was varied by excursions to different parts of Attica; Eleusis,
+Hymettus, Cape Colonna, (Sunium, the scene of Falconer's shipwreck), the
+Colonus of OEdipus, and Marathon, the plain of which is said to have been
+placed at his disposal for about the same sum that, thirty years later, an
+American offered to give for the bark with the poet's name on the tree at
+Newstead. Byron had a poor opinion of the modern Athenians, who seem to
+have at this period done their best to justify the Roman satirist. He
+found them superficial, cunning, and false; but, with generous historic
+insight, he says that no nation in like circumstances would have been much
+better; that they had the vices of ages of slavery, from which it would
+require ages of freedom to emancipate them.
+
+In the Greek capital he lodged at the house of a respectable lady, widow
+of an English vice-consul, who had three daughters, the eldest of whom,
+Theresa, acquired an innocent and enviable fame as the Maid of Athens,
+without the dangerous glory of having taken any very firm hold of the
+heart that she was asked to return. A more solid passion was the poet's
+genuine indignation on the "lifting," in Border phrase, of the marbles
+from the Parthenon, and their being taken to England by order of Lord
+Elgin. Byron never wrote anything more sincere than the _Curse of
+Minerva_; and he has recorded few incidents more pathetic than that of the
+old Greek who, when the last stone was removed for exportation, shed
+tears, and said "[Greek: telos]!" The question is still an open one of
+ethics. There are few Englishmen of the higher rank who do not hold London
+in the right hand as barely balanced by the rest of the world in the left;
+a judgment in which we can hardly expect Romans, Parisians, and Athenians
+to concur. On the other hand, the marbles were mouldering at Athens, and
+they are preserved, like ginger, in the British Museum.
+
+Among the adventures of this period are an expedition across the Ilissus
+to some caves near Kharyati, in which the travellers were by accident
+nearly entombed; another to Pentelicus, where they tried to carve their
+names on the marble rock; and a third to the environs of the Piraeus in
+the evening light. Early in March the convenient departure of an English
+sloop-of-war induced them to make an excursion to Smyrna. There, on the
+28th of March, the second canto of _Childe Harold_, begun in the previous
+autumn at Janina, was completed. They remained in the neighbourhood,
+visiting Ephesus, without poetical result further than a reference to the
+jackals, in the _Siege of Corinth_; and on April 11th left by the
+"Salsette," a frigate on its way to Constantinople. The vessel touched at
+the Troad, and Byron spent some time on land, snipe-shooting, and rambling
+among the reputed ruins of Ilium. The poet characteristically, in _Don
+Juan_ and elsewhere, attacks the sceptics, and then half ridicules the
+belief.
+
+ I've stood upon Achilles' tomb,
+ And heard Troy doubted! Time will doubt of Rome!
+ * * * * *
+ There, on the green and village-cotted hill, is,
+ Flank'd by the Hellespont, and by the sea,
+ Entomb'd the bravest of the brave Achilles.--
+ They say so: Bryant says the contrary.
+
+Being again detained in the Dardanelles, waiting for a fair wind, Byron
+landed on the European side, and swam, in company with Lieutenant
+Ekenhead, from Sestos to Abydos--a performance of which he boasts some
+twenty times. The strength of the current is the main difficulty of a
+feat, since so surpassed as to have passed from notice; but it was a
+tempting theme for classical allusions. At length, on May 14, he reached
+Constantinople, exalted the Golden Horn above all the sights he had seen,
+and now first abandoned his design of travelling to Persia. Galt, and
+other more or less gossiping travellers, have accumulated a number of
+incidents of the poet's life at this period, of his fanciful dress,
+blazing in scarlet and gold, and of his sometimes absurd contentions for
+the privileges of rank--as when he demanded precedence of the English
+ambassador in an interview with the Sultan, and, on its refusal, could
+only be pacified by the assurances of the Austrian internuncio. In
+converse with indifferent persons he displayed a curious alternation of
+frankness and hauteur, and indulged a habit of letting people up and down,
+by which he frequently gave offence. More interesting are narratives of
+the suggestion of some of his verses, as the slave-market in _Don Juan_,
+and the spectacle of the dead criminal tossed on the waves, revived in the
+_Bride of Abydos_. One example is, if we except Dante's _Ugolino_, the
+most remarkable instance in literature of the expansion, without the
+weakening, of the horrible. Take first Mr. Hobhouse's plain prose: "The
+sensations produced by the state of the weather"--it was wretched and
+stormy when they left the "Salsette" for the city--"and leaving a
+comfortable cabin, were in unison with the impressions which we felt when,
+passing under the palace of the Sultans, and gazing at the gloomy cypress
+which rises above the walls, we saw two dogs gnawing a dead body." After
+this we may measure the almost fiendish force of a morbid imagination
+brooding over the incident,--
+
+ And he saw the lean dogs beneath the wall
+ Hold o'er the dead their carnival:
+ Gorging and growling o'er carcass and limb,
+ They were too busy to bark at him.
+ From a Tartar's skull they had stripp'd the flesh,
+ As ye peel the fig when its fruit is fresh;
+ And their white tusks crunch'd on the whiter skull,
+ As it slipp'd through their jaws when their edge grow dull.
+
+No one ever more persistently converted the incidents of travel into
+poetic material; but sometimes in doing so he borrowed more largely from
+his imagination than his memory, as in the description of the seraglio, of
+which there is reason to doubt his having seen more than the entrance.
+
+Byron and Hobhouse set sail from Constantinople on the 14th July,
+1810--the latter to return direct to England, a determination which, from
+no apparent fault on either side, the former did not regret. One incident
+of the passage derives interest from its possible consequence. Taking up,
+and unsheathing, a yataghan which he found on the quarter deck, ho
+remarked, "I should like to know how a person feels after committing a
+murder." This harmless piece of melodrama--the idea of which is expanded
+in Mr. Dobell's _Balder_, and parodied in _Firmilian_--may have been the
+basis of a report afterwards circulated, and accepted among others by
+Goethe, that his lordship had committed a murder; hence, obviously, the
+character of _Lara_, and the mystery of _Manfred!_ The poet parted from
+his friend at Zea, (Ceos): after spending some time in solitude on the
+little island, he returned to Athens, and there renewed acquaintance with
+his school friend, the Marquis of Sligo, who after a few days accompanied
+him to Corinth. They then separated, and Byron went on to Patras in the
+Morea, where he had business with the Consul. He dates from there at the
+close of July. It is impossible to give a consecutive account of his life
+during the next ten months, a period consequently filled up with the
+contradictory and absurd mass of legends before referred to. A few facts
+only of any interest are extricable. During at least half of the time his
+head-quarters were at Athens, where he again met his friend the Marquis,
+associated with the English Consul and Lady Hester Stanhope, studied
+Romaic in a Franciscan monastery--where he saw and conversed with a motley
+crew of French, Italians, Danes, Greeks, Turks, and Americans,--wrote to
+his mother and others, saying he had swum from Sestos to Abydos, was sick
+of Fletcher bawling for beef and beer, had done with authorship, and hoped
+on his return to lead a quiet recluse life. He nevertheless made notes to
+_Harold_, composed the _Hints from Horace_ and the _Curse of Minerva_, and
+presumably brooded over, and outlined in his mind, many of his verse
+romances. We hear no more of the, _Maid of Athens_, but there is no fair
+ground to doubt that the _Giaour_ was suggested by his rescue of a young
+woman whom, for the fault of an amour with some Frank, a party of
+Janissaries were about to throw, sewn up in a sack, into the sea. Mr. Galt
+gives no authority for his statement, that the girl's deliverer was the
+original cause of her sentence. We may rest assured that if it had been
+so, Byron himself would have told us of it.
+
+A note to the _Siege of Corinth_ is suggestive of his unequalled
+restlessness. "I visited all three--Tripolitza, Napoli, and Argos--in
+1810-11; and in the course of journeying through the country, from my
+first arrival in 1809, crossed the Isthmus eight times on my way from
+Attica to the Morea." In the latter locality we find him during the autumn
+the honoured guest of the Vizier Valhi (a son of Ali Pasha), who presented
+him with a fine horse. During a second visit to Patras, in September, he
+was attacked by the same sort of marsh fever from which, fourteen years
+afterwards, in the near neighbourhood, he died. On his recovery, in
+October, he complains of having been nearly killed by the heroic measures
+of the native doctors: "One of them trusts to his genius, never having
+studied; the other, to a campaign of eighteen months against the sick of
+Otranto, which he made in his youth with great effect. When I was seized
+with my disorder, I protested against both these assassins, but in vain."
+He was saved by the zeal of his servants, who asseverated that if his
+lordship died they would take good care the doctors should also; on which
+the learned men discontinued their visits, and the patient revived. On his
+final return to Athens, the restoration of his health was retarded by one
+of his long courses of reducing diet; he lived mainly on rice, and vinegar
+and water. From that city he writes in the early spring, intimating his
+intention of proceeding to Egypt; but Mr. Hanson, his man of business,
+ceasing to send him remittances, the scheme was abandoned. Beset by
+letters about his debts, he again declares his determination to hold fast
+by Newstead, adding that if the place which is his only tie to England is
+sold, he won't come back at all. Life on the shores of the Archipelago is
+far cheaper and happier, and "Ubi bene ibi patria," for such a citizen of
+the world as he has become. Later he went to Malta, and was detained
+there by another bad attack of tertian fever. The next record of
+consequence is from the "Volage" frigate, at sea, June 29, 1811, when he
+writes in a despondent strain to Hodgson, that he is returning home
+"without a hope, and almost without a desire," to wrangle with creditors
+and lawyers about executions and coal pits. "In short, I am sick and
+sorry; and when I have a little repaired my irreparable affairs, away I
+shall march, either to campaign in Spain, or back again to the East, where
+I can at least have cloudless skies and a cessation from impertinence. I
+am sick of fops, and poesy, and prate, and shall leave the whole Castalian
+state to Bufo, or anybody else. Howbeit, I have written some 4000 lines,
+of one kind or another, on my travels." With these, and a collection of
+marbles, and skulls, and hemlock, and tortoises, and servants, he reached
+London about the middle of July, and remained there, making some
+arrangements about business and publication. On the 23rd we have a short
+but kind letter to his mother, promising to pay her a visit on his way to
+Rochdale. "You know you are a vixen, but keep some champagne for me," he
+had written from abroad. On receipt of the letter she remarked, "If I
+should be dead before he comes down, what a strange thing it, would be."
+Towards the close of the month she had an attack so alarming that he was
+summoned; but before, he had time to arrive she had expired, on the 1st of
+August, in a fit of rage brought on by reading an upholsterer's bill. On
+the way Byron heard the intelligence, and wrote to Dr. Pigot: "I now feel
+the truth of Gray's observation, that we can only have _one_ mother. Peace
+be with her!" On arriving at Newstead, all their storms forgotten, the son
+was so affected that he did not trust himself to go to the funeral, but
+stood dreamily gazing at the cortege from the gate of the Abbey. Five days
+later, Charles S. Matthews was drowned.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+
+SECOND PERIOD OF AUTHORSHIP--IN LONDON--CORRESPONDENCE WITH SCOTT
+
+The deaths of Long, Wingfield, Eddlestone, Matthews, and of his mother,
+had narrowed the circle of the poet's early companions; and, though he
+talks of each loss in succession as if it had been that of an only friend,
+we can credit a degree of loneliness, and excuse a certain amount of
+bitterness in the feelings with which he returned to London. He had at
+this time seen very little of the only relative whom he over deeply loved.
+He and his half-sister met casually in 1804, and again in the following
+year. After her marriage (1807), Byron writes from abroad (1810),
+regretting having distressed her by his quarrel with Lord Carlisle. In
+1811 she is mentioned as reversionary heiress of his estate. Towards the
+close of 1813, there are two allusions which testify to their mutual
+affection. Next wo come to the interesting series of letters of 1815-16,
+published with the Memoir of Mr. Hodgson, to whom, along with Hobhouse and
+Scrope Davies, his lordship in a will and codicil leaves the management of
+his property. Harness appears frequently at this period among his
+surviving intimates: to this list there was shortly added another. In
+speaking of his _Bards and Reviewers_, the author makes occasional
+reference to the possibility of his being called to account for some of
+his attacks. His expectation was realized by a letter from the poet Moore,
+dated Dublin, Jan. 1, 1810, couched in peremptory terms, demanding to know
+if his lordship avowed the authorship of the insults contained in the
+poem. This letter, being entrusted to Mr. Hodgson, was not forwarded to
+Byron abroad; but shortly after his return, he received another in more
+conciliatory terms, renewing the complaint. To this he replied, in a stiff
+but manly letter, that he had never meant to insult Mr. Moore; but that he
+was, if necessary, ready to give him satisfaction. Moore accepting the
+explanation, somewhat querulously complained of his advances to friendship
+not being received. Byron again replied that much as he would feel
+honoured by Mr. Moore's acquaintance, he being practically threatened by
+the irate Irishman could hardly make the first advances. This called forth
+a sort of apology; the correspondents met at the house of Mr. Rogers, and
+out of the somewhat awkward circumstances, owing to the frankness of the
+"noble author," as the other ever after delights to call him, arose the
+life-long intimacy which had such various and lasting results. Moore has
+been called a false friend to Byron, and a traitor to his memory. The
+judgment is somewhat harsh, but the association between them was
+unfortunate. Thomas Moore had some sterling qualities. His best satirical
+pieces are inspired by a real indignation, and lit up by a genuine humour.
+He was also an exquisite musician in words, and must have been
+occasionally a fascinating companion. But he was essentially a worldling,
+and, as such, a superficial critic. He encouraged the shallow affectations
+of his great friend's weaker work, and recoiled in alarm before the daring
+defiance of his stronger. His criticisms on all Byron wrote and felt
+seriously on religion are almost worthy of a conventicle. His letters to
+others on _Manfred_, and _Cain_, and _Don Juan_, are the expression of
+sentiments which he had never the courage to state explicitly to the
+author. On the other hand, Byron was attracted beyond reasonable measure
+by his gracefully deferential manners, paid too much regard to his
+opinions, and overestimated his genius. For the subsequent destruction of
+the memoirs, urged by Mr. Hobhouse and Mrs. Leigh, he was not wholly
+responsible; though a braver man, having accepted the position of his
+lordship's literary legatee, with the express understanding that he would
+seue to the fulfilment of the wishes of his dead friend, would have to the
+utmost resisted their total frustration.
+
+Meanwhile, on landing in England, the poet had placed in the hands of Mr.
+Dallas the _Hints from Horace_, which he intended to have brought out by
+the publisher Cawthorne. Of this performance--an inferior edition,
+relieved by a few strong touches, of the _Bards and Reviewers_--Dallas
+ventured to express his disapproval. "Have you no other result of your
+travels?" he asked; and got for answer, "A few short pieces; and a lot of
+Spenserian stanzas; not worth troubling you with, but you are welcome to
+them." Dallas took the remark literally, saw they were a safe success, and
+assumed to himself the merit of the discovery, the risks, and the profits.
+It is the converse of the story of Gabriel Harvey and the _Faery Queene_.
+Tho first two cantos of _Childe Harold_ bear no comparison with the legend
+of _Una and the Red Cross Knight_; but there was no mistake about their
+proof of power, their novelty, and adaptation to a public taste as yet
+unjaded by eloquent and imaginative descriptions of foreign scenery,
+manners, and climates.
+
+The poem--after being submitted to Gifford, in defiance of the
+protestations of the author, who feared that the reference might seem to
+seek the favour of the august _Quarterly_--was accepted by Mr. Murray, and
+proceeded through the press, subject to change and additions, during the
+next five months. The _Hints from Horace_, fortunately postponed and then
+suspended, appeared posthumously in 1831. Byron remained at Newstead till
+the close of October, negotiating with creditors and lawyers, and engaged
+in a correspondence about his publications, in the course of which he
+deprecates any identification of himself and his hero, though he had at
+first called him Childe Byron. "Instruct Mr. Murray," he entreats, "not to
+allow his shopman to call the work 'Child of Harrow's Pilgrimage,' as he
+has done to some of my astonished friends, who wrote to inquire after my
+_sanity_ on the occasion, as well they might." At the end of the month we
+find him in London, again indulging in a voyage in "the ship of fools," in
+which Moore claims to have accompanied him; but at the same time
+exhibiting remarkable shrewdness in reference to the affairs of his
+household. In February, 1812, he again declares to Hodgson his resolve to
+leave England for ever, and fix himself in "one of the fairest islands of
+the East." On the 27th he made in the House of Lords his speech on a Bill
+to introduce special penalties against the frame-breakers of Nottingham.
+This effort, on which he received many compliments, led among other
+results to a friendly correspondence with Lord Holland. On April 21st of
+the same year, he again addressed the House on behalf of Roman Catholic
+Emancipation; and in June, 1813, in favour of Major Cartwright's petition.
+On all these occasions, as afterwards on the continent, Byron espoused the
+Liberal side of politics. But his role was that of Manlius or Caesar, and
+he never fails to remind us that he himself was _for_ the people, not _of_
+them. His latter speeches, owing partly to his delivery, blamed as too
+Asiatic, were less successful. To a reader the three seem much on the same
+level. They are clever, but evidently set performances, and leave us no
+ground to suppose that the poet's abandonment of a parliamentary career
+was a serious loss to the nation.
+
+On the 29th of February the first and second cantos of _Childe Harold_
+appeared. An early copy was sent to Mrs. Leigh, with the inscription: "To
+Augusta, my dearest sister and my best friend, who has ever loved me much
+better than I deserved, this volume is presented by her father's son and
+most affectionate brother, B." The book ran through seven editions in four
+weeks. The effect of the first edition of Burns, and the sale of Scott's
+_Lays_, are the only parallels in modern poetic literature to this
+success. All eyes were suddenly fastened on the author, who let his satire
+sleep, and threw politics aside, to be the romancer of his day and for two
+years the darling of society. Previous to the publition, Mr. Moore
+confesses to have gratified his lordship with the expression of the fear
+that _Childe Harold_ was too good for the age. Its success was due to the
+reverse being the truth. It was just on the level of its age. Its flowing
+verse, defaced by rhymical faults perceptible only to finer ears, its
+prevailing sentiment, occasional boldness relieved by pleasing platitudes,
+its half affected rakishness, here and there elevated by a rush as of
+morning air, and its frequent richness--not yet, as afterwards,
+splendour--of description, were all appreciated by the fashionable London
+of the Regency; while the comparatively mild satire, not keen enough to
+scarify, only gave a more piquant flavour to the whole. Byron's genius,
+yet in the green leaf, was not too far above the clever masses of
+pleasure-loving manhood by which it was surrounded. It was natural that
+the address on the reopening of Drury Lane theatre should be written by
+"the world's new joy"--the first great English poet-peer; as natural as
+that in his only published satire of the period he should inveigh against
+almost the only amusement in which he could not share. The address was
+written at the request of Lord Holland, when of some hundred competitive
+pieces none had been found exactly suitable--a circumstance which gave
+rise to the famous parodies entitled _The Rejected Addresses_--and it was
+thought that the ultimate choice would conciliate all rivalry. The care
+which Byron bestowed on the correction of the first draft of this piece,
+is characteristic of his habit of writing off his poems at a gush, and
+afterwards carefully elaborating them.
+
+_The Waltz_ was published anonymously in April, 1813. It was followed in
+May by the _Giaour_, the first of the flood of verse romances which,
+during the three succeeding years, he poured forth with impetuous fluency,
+and which were received with almost unrestrained applause. The plots and
+sentiments and imagery are similar in them all. The Giaour steals the
+mistress of Hassan, who revenges his honour by drowning her. The Giaour
+escapes; returns, kills Hassan, and then goes to a monastery. In the
+_Bride of Abydos_, published in the December of the same year, Giaffir
+wants to marry his daughter Zuleika to Carasman Pasha. She runs off with
+Selim, her reputed brother--in reality her cousin, and so at last her
+legitimate lover. They are caught; he is slain in fight; she dies, to slow
+music. In the _Corsair_, published January, 1814, Conrad, a pirate,
+"linked with one virtue and a thousand crimes!" is beloved by Medora, who
+on his predatory expeditions, sits waiting for him (like Hassan's and
+Sisera's mother) in a tower. On one of these he attacks Seyd Pasha, and is
+overborne by superior force; but Gulnare, a female slave of Seyd, kills
+her master, and runs off with Conrad, who finds Medora dead and vanishes.
+In _Lara_, the sequel to this--written in May and June, published in
+August--a man of mystery appears in the Morea, with a page, Kaled. After
+adventures worthy of Mrs. Radcliffe--from whose Schledoni the Giaour is
+said to have been drawn--Lara falls in battle with his deadly foe,
+Ezzelin, and turns out to be Conrad, while Kaled is of course Gulnare. The
+_Hebrew Melodies_, written in December, 1814, are interesting, in
+connexion with the author's early familiarity with the Old Testament, and
+from the force and music that mark the best of them; but they can hardly
+be considered an important contribution to the devotional verse of
+England. The _Siege of Corinth_ and _Parisina_, composed after his
+marriage in the summer and autumn of 1815, appeared in the following year.
+The former is founded on the siege of the city, when the Turks took it
+from Menotti; but our attention is concentrated on Alp the renegade,
+another sketch from the same protoplastic ruffian, who leads on the Turks,
+is in love with the daughter of the governor of the city, tries to save
+her, but dies. The poem is frequently vigorous, but it ends badly.
+_Parisina_, though unequal, is on the whole a poem of a higher order than
+the others of the period. The trial scene exhibits some dramatic power,
+and the shriek of the lady mingling with Ugo's funeral dirge lingers in
+our ears, along with the convent bells--
+
+ In the grey square turret swinging,
+ With a deep sound, to and fro,
+ Heavily to the heart they go.
+
+These romances belong to the same period of the author's poetic career as
+the first two cantos of _Childe Harold_. They followed one another like
+brilliant fireworks. They all exhibit a command of words, a sense of
+melody, and a flow of rhythm and rhyme, which mastered Moore and even
+Scott on their own ground. None of them are wanting in passages, as "He
+who hath bent him o'er the dead," and the description of Alp leaning
+against a column, which strike deeper than any verse of either of those
+writers. But there is an air of melodrama in them all. Harmonious delights
+of novel readers, they will not stand against the winnowing wind of
+deliberate criticism. They harp on the same string, without the variations
+of a Paganini. They are potentially endless reproductions of one phase of
+an ill-regulated mind--the picture of the same quasi-melancholy vengeful
+man, who knows no friend but a dog, and reads on the tombs of the great
+only "the glory and the nothing of a name," the exile who cannot flee from
+himself, "the wandering outlaw of his own dark mind," who has not loved
+the world nor the world him,--
+
+ Whose heart was form'd for softness, warp'd by wrong,
+ Betray'd too early, and beguiled too long--
+
+all this, _decies repetita_, grows into a weariness and vexation. Mr.
+Carlyle harshly compares it to the screaming of a meat-jack. The reviewers
+and the public of the time thought differently. Jeffrey, penitent for the
+early _faux pas_ of his _Review_, as Byron remained penitent for his
+answering assault, writes of _Lara_, "Passages of it may be put into
+competition with anything that poetry has produced in point either of
+pathos or energy." Moore--who afterwards wrote, not to Byron, that seven
+devils had entered into _Manfred_--professes himself "enraptured with it."
+Fourteen thousand copies of the _Corsair_ wore sold in a day. But hear the
+author's own half-boast, half-apology: "_Lara_ I wrote while undressing
+after coming home from balls and masquerades, in the year of revelry 1814.
+The _Bride_ was written in four, the _Corsair_ in ten days. This I take to
+he a humiliating confession, as it proves my own want of judgment in
+publishing, and the public's in reading, things which cannot have stamina
+for permanence."
+
+The pecuniary profits accruing to Byron from his works began with _Lara_,
+for which he received 700_l_. He had made over to Mr. Dallas, besides
+other gifts to the same ungrateful recipient, the profits of _Harold_,
+amounting to 600_l_, and of the _Corsair_, which brought 525_l_. The
+proceeds of the _Giaour_ and the _Bride_ were also surrendered.
+
+During this period, 1813-1816, he had become familiar with all the phases
+of London society, "tasted their pleasures," and, towards the close, "felt
+their decay." His associates in those years were of two classes--men of
+the world, and authors. Feted and courted in all quarters, he patronized
+the theatres, became in 1815 a member of the Drury Lane Committee, "liked
+the dandies," including Beau Brummell, and was introduced to the Regent.
+Their interview, in June 1812, in the course of which the latter paid
+unrestrained compliments to _Harold_ and the poetry of Scott, is naively
+referred to by Mr. Moore "as reflecting even still more honour on the
+Sovereign himself than on the two poets." Byron, in a different spirit,
+writes to Lord Holland: "I have now great hope, in the event of Mr. Pye's
+decease, of warbling truth at Court, like Mr. Mallet of indifferent
+memory. Consider, one hundred marks a year! besides the wine and the
+disgrace." We can hardly conceive the future author of the _Vision of
+Judgment_ writing odes to dictation. He does not seem to have been much
+fascinated with the first gentleman of Europe, whom at no distant date he
+assailed in the terrible "Avatar," and left the laureateship to Mr.
+Southey.
+
+Among leaders in art and letters he was brought into more or less intimate
+contact with Sir Humphry Davy, the Edgeworths, Sir James Mackintosh,
+Colman the dramatic author, the older Kean, Monk Lewis, Grattan, Curran,
+and Madame de Stael. Of a meeting of the last two he remarks, "It was like
+the confluence of the Rhone and the Saone, and they were both so ugly that
+I could not help wondering how the best intellects of France and Ireland
+could have taken up respectively such residences."
+
+About this time a communication from Mr Murray in reference to the meeting
+with the Regent led to a letter from Sir Walter Scott to Lord Byron, the
+beginning of a life-long friendship, and one of the most pleasing pages of
+biography. These two great men were for a season perpetually pitted
+against one another, as the foremost competitors for literary favour. When
+_Rokeby_ came out, contemporaneously with the _Giaour_, the undergraduates
+of Oxford and Cambridge ran races to catch the first copies, and laid bets
+as to which of the rivals would win. During the anti-Byronic fever of
+1840-1860 they were perpetually contrasted as the representatives of the
+manly and the morbid schools. A later sentimentalism has affected to
+despise the work of both. The fact therefore that from an early period the
+men themselves knew each other as they were, is worth illustrating.
+
+Scott's letter, in which a generous recognition of the pleasure he had
+derived from tho work of the English poet, was followed by a manly
+remonstrance on the subject of the attack in the _Bards and Reviewers_,
+drew from Byron in the following month (July 1812) an answer in the same
+strain, descanting on the Prince's praises of the _Lay_ and _Marmion_, and
+candidly apologizing for the "evil works of his nonage." "The satire," he
+remarks, "was written when I was very young and very angry, and fully bent
+on displaying my wrath and my wit; and now I am haunted by the ghosts of
+my wholesale assertions." This, in turn, called forth another letter to
+Byron eager for more of his verses, with a cordial invitation to
+Abbotsford on the ground of Scotland's maternal claim on him, and asking
+for information about Pegasus and Parnassus. After this the correspondence
+continues with greater freedom, and the same display on either side of
+mutual respect. When Scott says "the _Giaour_ is praised among our
+mountains," and Byron returns "_Waverley_ is the best novel I have read,"
+there is no suspicion of flattery--it is the interchange of compliments
+between men,
+
+ Et cantare pares et respondere parati.
+
+They talk in just the same manner to third parties. "I gave over writing
+romances," says the elder, in the spirit of a great-hearted gentleman,"
+because Byron beat me. He hits the mark, where I don't even pretend to
+fledge my arrow. He has access to a stream of sentiment unknown to me."
+The younger, on the other hand, deprecates the comparisons that were being
+invidiously drawn between them. He presents his copy of the _Giaour_ to
+Scott, with the phrase "To the monarch of Parnassus," and compares the
+feeling of those who cavilled at his fame to that of the Athenians towards
+Aristides. From those sentiments, he never swerves, recognizing to the
+last the breadth of character of the most generous of his critics, and
+referring to him, during his later years in Italy, as the Wizard and the
+Ariosto of the North. A meeting was at length arranged between them. Scott
+looked forward to it with anxious interest, humorously remarking that
+Byron should say,--
+
+ Art thou the man whom men famed Grissell call?
+
+And he reply--
+
+ Art thou the still more famed Tom Thumb the small?
+
+They met in London during the spring of 1815. The following sentences are
+from Sir Walter's account of it:--"Report had prepared me to meet a man
+of peculiar habits and quick temper, and I had some doubts whether we were
+likely to suit each other in society. I was most agreeably disappointed in
+this respect. I found Lord Byron in the highest degree courteous, and even
+kind. We met for an hour or two almost daily in Mr. Murray's drawing-room,
+and found a great deal to say to each other. Our sentiments agreed a good
+deal, except upon the subjects of religion and politics, upon neither of
+which I was inclined to believe that Lord Byron entertained very fixed
+opinions. On politics he used sometimes to express a high strain of what
+is now called Liberalism; but it appeared to me that the pleasure it
+afforded him as a vehicle of displaying his wit and satire against
+individuals in office was at the bottom of this habit of thinking. At
+heart, I would have termed Byron a patrician on principle. His reading did
+not seem to me to have been very extensive. I remember repeating to him
+the fine poem of Hardyknute, and some one asked me what I could possibly
+have been telling Byron by which he was so much agitated. I saw him for
+the last time in (September) 1815, after I returned from France; he dined
+or lunched with me at Long's in Bond Street. I never saw him so full of
+gaiety and good humour. The day of this interview was the most interesting
+I ever spent. Several letters passed between us--one perhaps every half
+year. Like the old heroes in Homer we exchanged gifts; I gave Byron a
+beautiful dagger mounted with gold, which had been the property of the
+redoubted Elfi Bey. But I was to play the part of Diomed in the _Iliad_,
+for Byron sent me, some time after, a large sepulchral vase of silver,
+full of dead men's bones, found within the land walls of Athens. He was
+often melancholy, almost gloomy. When I observed him in this humour I used
+either to wait till it went off of its own accord, or till some natural
+and easy mode occurred of leading him into conversation, when the shadows
+almost always left his countenance, like the mist arising from a
+landscape. I think I also remarked in his temper starts of suspicion, when
+he seemed to pause and consider whether there had not been a secret and
+perhaps offensive meaning in something that was said to him. In this case
+I also judged it best to let his mind, like a troubled spring, work itself
+clear, which it did in a minute or two. A downright steadiness of manner
+was the way to his good opinion. Will Rose, looking by accident at his
+feet, saw him scowling furiously; but on his showing no consciousness, his
+lordship resumed his easy manner. What I liked about him, besides his
+boundless genius, was his generosity of spirit as well as of purse, and
+his utter contempt of all the affectations of literature. He liked Moore
+and me because, with all our other differences, we were both good-natured
+fellows, not caring to maintain our dignity, enjoying the _mot-pour-rire_.
+He wrote from impulse never from effort, and therefore I have always
+reckoned Burns and Byron the most genuine poetic geniuses of my time, and
+of half a century before me. We have many men of high poetic talents, but
+none of that ever-gushing and perennial fountain of natural waters."
+
+Scott, like all hale men of sound sense, regretted the almost fatal
+incontinence which, in the year of his greatest private troubles, led his
+friend to make a parade of them before the public. He speaks more than
+once of his unhappy tendency to exhibit himself as the dying gladiator,
+and even compares him to his peacock, screeching before his window because
+he chooses to bivouack apart from his mate; but he read a copy of the
+Ravenna diary without altering his view that his lordship was his own
+worst maligner. Scott, says Lockhart, considered Byron the only poet of
+transcendent talents we had had since Dryden. There is preserved a curious
+record of his meeting with a greater poet than Dryden, but one whose
+greatness neither he nor Scott suspected. Mr. Crabb Robinson reports
+Wordsworth to have said, in Charles Lamb's chambers, about the year 1808,
+"These reviewers put me out of patience. Here is a young man who has
+written a volume of poetry; and these fellows, just because he is a lord,
+set upon him. The young man will do something, if he goes on as he has
+begun. But these reviewers seem to think that nobody may write poetry
+unless he lives in a garret." Years after, Lady Byron, on being told this,
+exclaimed, "Ah, if Byron had known that, he would never have attacked
+Wordsworth. He went one day to meet him at dinner, and I said, 'Well, how
+did the young poet get on with the old one?' 'Why, to tell the truth,'
+said he, 'I had but one feeling from the beginning of the visit to the
+end, and that was _reverence_.'" Similarly, he began by being on good
+terms with Southey, and after a meeting at Holland House, wrote
+enthusiastically of his prepossessing appearance.
+
+Byron and the leaders of the so-called Lake School were, at starting,
+common heirs of the revolutionary spirit; they were, either in their
+social views or personal feelings, to a large extent influenced by the
+most morbid, though in some respects the most magnetic, genius of modern
+France, J.J. Rousseau; but their temperaments were in many respects
+fundamentally diverse; and the pre-established discord between them ere
+long began to make itself manifest in their following out widely divergent
+paths. Wordsworth's return to nature had been preluded by Cowper; that of
+Byron by Burns. The revival of the one ripened into a restoration of
+simpler manners and old beliefs; the other was the spirit of the storm.
+When they had both become recognized powers, neither appreciated the work
+of the other. A few years after this date Byron wrote of Wordsworth, to a
+common admirer of both: "I take leave to differ from you as freely as I
+once agreed with you. His performances, since the _Lyrical Ballads_, are
+miserably inadequate to the ability that lurks within him. There is,
+undoubtedly, much natural talent spilt over the _Excursion_; but it is
+rain upon rocks, where it stands and stagnates; or rain upon sand, where
+it falls without fertilizing." This criticism with others in like strain,
+was addressed to Mr. Leigh Hunt, to whom, in 1812, when enduring for
+radicalism's sake a very comfortable incarceration, Byron had, in company
+with Moore, paid a courteous visit.
+
+Of the correspondence of this period--flippant, trenchant, or
+sparkling--few portions are more calculated to excite a smile than the
+record of his frequent resolutions made, reasseverated, and broken, to
+have done with literature; even going the length on some occasions of
+threatening to suppress his works, and, if possible, recall the existing
+copies. He affected being a man of the world unmercifully, and had a real
+delight in clever companions who assumed the same role. Frequent allusion
+is made to his intercourse with Erskine and Sheridan: the latter he is
+never tired of praising, as "the author of the best modern comedy (_School
+for Scandal_), the best farce (_The Critic_), and the best oration (the
+famous Begum speech) ever heard in this country." They spent many an
+evening together, and probably cracked many a bottle. It is Byron who
+tells the story of Sheridan being found in a gutter in a sadly incapable
+state; and, on some one asking "Who is this?" stammering out
+"Wilberforce." On one occasion he speaks of coming out of a tavern with
+the dramatist, when they both found the staircase in a very cork-screw
+condition: and elsewhere, of encountering a Mr. C----, who "had no notion
+of meeting with a bon-vivant in a scribbler," and summed the poet's eulogy
+with the phrase, "he drinks like a man." Hunt, the tattler, who observed
+his lordship's habits in Italy, with the microscope of malice ensconced
+within the same walls, makes it a charge against his host that he would
+not drink like a man. Once for all it may be noted, that although there
+was no kind of excess in which Byron, whether from bravado or inclination,
+failed occasionally to indulge, he was never for any stretch of time given
+over, like Burns, to what is technically termed intemperance. His head
+does not seem to have been strong, and under the influence of stimulants
+he may have been led to talk a great deal of his dangerous nonsense. But
+though he could not say, with Wordsworth, that only once, at Cambridge,
+had his brain been "excited by the fumes of wine," his prevailing sins
+were in other directions.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+
+MARRIAGE, AND FAREWELL TO ENGLAND.
+
+"As for poets," says Scott, "I have seen all the best of my time and
+country, and, though Burns had the most glorious eye imaginable, I never
+thought any of them would come up to an artist's notion of the character,
+except Byron. His countenance is a thing to dream of." Coleridge writes to
+the same effect, in language even stronger. We have from all sides similar
+testimony to the personal beauty which led the unhappiest of his devotees
+to exclaim, "That pale face is my fate!"
+
+Southern critics, as Chasles, Castelar, even Mazzini, have dealt leniently
+with the poet's relations to the other sex; and Elze extends to him in
+this regard the same excessive stretch of charity. "Dear Childe Harold,"
+exclaims the German professor, "was positively besieged by women. They
+have, in truth, no right to complain of him: from his childhood he had
+seen them on their worst side." It is the casuistry of hero-worship to
+deny that Byron was unjust to women, not merely in isolated instances, but
+in his prevailing views of their character and claims. "I regard them," he
+says, in a passage only distinguished from others by more extravagant
+petulance, "as very pretty but inferior creatures, who are as little in
+their place at our tables as they would be in our council chambers. The
+whole of the present system with regard to the female sex is a remnant of
+the barbarism of the chivalry of our forefathers. I look on them as
+grown-up children; but, like a foolish mamma, I am constantly the slave of
+one of them. The Turks shut up their women, and are much happier; give a
+woman a looking-glass and burnt almonds, and she will be content."
+
+In contrast with this, we have the moods in which he drew his pictures of
+Angiolina, and Haidee, and Aurora Raby, and wrote the invocations to the
+shade of Astarte, and his letters in prose and verse to Augusta; but the
+above passage could never have been written by Chaucer, or Spenser, or
+Shakespeare, or Shelley. The class whom he was reviling seemed, however,
+during "the day of his destiny," bent on confirming his judgment by the
+blindness of their worship. His rank and fame, the glittering splendour of
+his verse, the romance of his travels, his picturesque melancholy and
+affectation of mysterious secrets, combined with the magic of his presence
+to bewitch and bewilder them. The dissenting malcontents, condemned as
+prudes and blues, had their revenge. Generally, we may say that women who
+had not written books adored Byron; women who had written or were writing
+books distrusted, disliked, and made him a moral to adorn their tales,
+often to point their fables with. He was by the one set caressed and
+spoilt, and "beguiled too long;" by the other, "betrayed too late." The
+recent memoirs of Frances Ann Kemble present a curious record of the
+process of passing from one extreme to the other. She dwells on the
+fascination exerted over her mind by the first reading of his poetry, and
+tells how she "fastened on the book with a grip like steel," and carried
+it off and hid it under her pillow; how it affected her "like an evil
+potion," and stirred her whole being with a tempest of excitement, till
+finally she, with equal weakness, flung it aside, "resolved to read that
+grand poetry no more, and broke through the thraldom of that powerful
+spell." The confession brings before us a type of the transitions of the
+century, on its way from the Byronic to the anti-Byronic fever, of which
+later state Mrs. Norton and Miss Martineau are among the most pronounced
+representatives.
+
+Byron's garrulity with regard to those delicate matters on which men of
+more prudence or chivalry are wont to set the seal of silence, has often
+the same practical effect as reticence; for he talks so much at
+large--every page of his Journal being, by his own admission, apt to
+"confute and abjure its predecessor"--that we are often none the wiser.
+Amid a mass of conjecture, it is manifest that during the years between
+his return from Greece and final expatriation (1811-1816), including the
+whole period of his social glory--though not yet of his solid fame--he was
+lured into liaisons of all sorts and shades. Some, now acknowledged as
+innocent, were blared abroad by tongues less skilled in pure invention
+than in distorting truth. On others, as commonplaces of a temperament "all
+meridian," it were waste of time to dwell. Byron rarely put aside a
+pleasure in his path; but his passions were seldom unaccompanied by
+affectionate emotions, genuine while they lasted. The verses to the memory
+of a lost love veiled as "Thyrza," of moderate artistic merit, were not,
+as Moore alleges, mere plays of imagination, but records of a sincere
+grief.[1] Another intimacy exerted so much influence on this phase of the
+poet's career, that to pass it over would be like omitting Vanessa's name
+from the record of Swift. Lady Caroline Lamb, granddaughter of the first
+Earl Spencer, was one of those few women of our climate who, by their
+romantic impetuosity, recall the "children of the sun." She read Burns in
+her ninth year, and in her thirteenth idealized William Lamb (afterwards
+Lord Melbourne) as a statue of Liberty. In her nineteenth (1805) she
+married him, and lived for some years, during which she was a reigning
+belle and toast, a domestic life only marred by occasional eccentricities.
+Rogers, whom in a letter to Lady Morgan she numbers among her lovers, said
+she ought to know the new poet, who was three years her junior, and the
+introduction took place in March, 1812. After the meeting, she wrote in
+her journal, "Mad--bad--and dangerous to know;" but, when the fashionable
+Apollo called at Melbourne House, she "flew to beautify herself." Flushed
+by his conquest, he spent a great part of the following year in her
+company, during which time the apathy or self-confidence of the husband
+laughed at the worship of the hero. "Conrad" detailed his travels and
+adventures, interested her, by his woes, dictated her amusements, invited
+her guests, and seems to have set rules to the establishment. "Medora," on
+the other hand, made no secret of her devotion, declared that they were
+affinities, and offered him her jewels. But after the first excitement, he
+began to grow weary of her talk about herself, and could not praise her
+indifferent verses: "he grew moody, and she fretful, when their mutual
+egotisms jarred." Byron at length concurred in her being removed for a
+season to her father's house in Ireland, on which occasion he wrote one of
+his glowing farewell letters. When she came back, matters were little
+better. The would-be Juliet beset the poet with renewed advances, on one
+occasion penetrating to his rooms in the disguise of a page, on another
+threatening to stab herself with a pair of scissors, and again, developing
+into a Medea, offering her gratitude to any one who would kill him. "The
+'Agnus' is furious," he writes to Hodgson, in February, 1813, in one of
+the somewhat ungenerous bursts to which he was too easily provoked. "You
+can have no idea of the horrible and absurd things she has said and done
+since (really from the best motives) I withdrew my homage.... The
+business of last summer I broke off, and now the amusement of the gentle
+fair is writing letters literally threatening my life." With one member of
+the family, Lady Melbourne, Mr. Lamb's mother, and sister of Sir Ralph
+Milbanke, he remained throughout on terms of pleasant intimacy. He
+appreciated the talent and sense, and was ready to profit by the
+experience and tact of "the cleverest of women." But her well-meant advice
+had unfortunate results, for it was on her suggestion that he became a
+suitor for the hand of her niece, Miss Milbanke. Byron first proposed to
+this lady in 1813; his offer was refused, but so graciously that they
+continued to correspond on friendly, which gradually grew into intimate
+terms, and his second offer, towards the close of the following year, was
+accepted.
+
+ [Footnote 1: Mr. Trelawny says that Thyrza was a cousin, but that on
+ this subject Byron was always reticent. Mr. Minto, as we have seen,
+ associates her with the disguised girl of 1807-8.]
+
+After a series of vain protests, and petulant warnings against her cousin
+by marriage, who she said was punctual at church, and learned, and knew
+statistics, but was "not for Conrad, no, no, no!" Lady Caroline lapsed
+into an attitude of fixed hostility; and shortly after the crash came, and
+her predictions were realized, vented her wrath in the now almost
+forgotten novel of _Glenarvon_, in which some of Byron's real features
+were represented in conjunction with many fantastic additions. Madame de
+Stael was kind enough to bring a copy of the book before his notice when
+they met on the Lake of Geneva, but he seems to have been less moved by it
+than by most attacks. We must however, bear in mind his own admission in a
+parallel case. "I say I am perfectly calm; I am, nevertheless, in a fury."
+Over the sad vista of the remaining years of the unhappy lady's life we
+need not linger. During a considerable part of it she appears hovering
+about the thin line that separates some kinds of wit and passion from
+madness; writing more novels, burning her hero's effigy and letters, and
+then clamouring for a lock of his hair, or a sight of his portrait;
+separated from, and again reconciled to, a husband to whose magnanimous
+forbearance and compassion she bears testimony to the last, comparing
+herself to Jane Shore; attempting Byronic verses, loudly denouncing and
+yet never ceasing inwardly to idolize, the man whom she regarded as her
+betrayer, perhaps only with justice in that he had unwittingly helped to
+overthrow her mental balance. After eight years of this life, lit up here
+and there by gleams of social brilliancy, we find her carriage, on the
+12th of July, 1824, suddenly confronted by a funeral. On hearing that the
+remains of Byron were being carried to the tomb, she shrieked, and
+fainted. Her health finally sank, and her mind gave way under this shock;
+but she lingered till January, 1828, when she died, after writing a calm
+letter to her husband, and bequeathing the poet's miniature to her friend,
+Lady Morgan.
+
+"I have paid some of my debts, and contracted others," Byron writes to
+Moore, on September 15th, 1814; "but I have a few thousand pounds which I
+can't spend after my heart in this climate, and so I shall go back to the
+south. I want to see Venice and the Alps, and Parmesan cheeses, and look
+at the coast of Greece from Italy. All this however depends upon an event
+which may or may not happen. Whether it will I shall probably know
+tomorrow, and if it does I can't well go abroad at present." "A wife," he
+had written, in the January of the same year, "would be my salvation;" but
+a marriage entered upon in such a flippant frame of mind could, scarcely
+have been other than disastrous. In the autumn of the year we are told
+that a friend,[2] observing how cheerless was the state both of his mind
+and prospects, advised him to marry, and after much discussion he
+consented, naming to his correspondent Miss Milbanke. To this his adviser
+objected, remarking that she had, at present, no fortune, and that his
+embarrassed affairs would not allow him to marry without one, etc.
+Accordingly, he agreed that his friend should write a proposal to another
+lady, which was done. A refusal arrived as they were one morning sitting
+together. "'You see,' said Lord Byron, 'that after all Miss Milbanke is to
+be the person,' and wrote on the moment. His friend, still remonstrating
+against his choice, took up the letter; but, on reading it, observed,
+'Well, really, this is a very pretty letter; it is a pity it should not
+go.' 'Then it _shall_ go,' said Lord Byron, and, in so saying, sealed and
+sent off this fiat of his fate." The incident seems cut from a French
+novel; but so does the whole strange story--one apparently insoluble
+enigma in an otherwise only too transparent life. On the arrival of the
+lady's answer he was seated at dinner, when his gardener came in, and
+presented him with his mother's wedding-ring, lost many years before, and
+which had just been found, buried in the mould beneath her window. Almost
+at the same moment the letter arrived; and Byron exclaimed, "If it
+contains a consent (which it did), I will be married with this very ring."
+He had the highest anticipations of his bride, appreciating her "talents,
+and excellent qualities;" and saying, "she is so good a person that I wish
+I was a better." About the same date he writes to various friends in the
+good spirits raised by his enthusiastic reception from the Cambridge
+undergraduates, when in the course of the same month he went to the Senate
+House to give his vote for a Professor of Anatomy.
+
+ [Footnote 2: Doubtless Moore himself, who tells the story.]
+
+The most constant and best of those friends was his sister, Augusta Leigh,
+whom, from the death of Miss Chaworth to his own, Byron, in the highest
+and purest sense of the word, loved more than any other human being.
+Tolerant of errors, which she lamented, and violences in which she had no
+share, she had a touch of their common family pride, most conspicuous in
+an almost cat-like clinging to their ancestral home. Her early published
+letters are full of regrets about the threatened sale of Newstead, on the
+adjournment of which, when the first purchaser had to pay 25,000_l_. for
+breaking his bargain, she rejoices, and over the consummation of which she
+mourns, in the manner of Milton's Eve--
+
+ Must I then leave thee, Paradise?
+
+In all her references to the approaching marriage there are blended notes
+of hope and fear. In thanking Hodgson for his kind congratulations, she
+trusts it will secure her brother's happiness. Later she adds her
+testimony to that of all outsiders at this time, as to the graces and
+genuine worth of the object of his choice. After the usual preliminaries,
+the ill-fated pair were united, at Seaham House, on the 2nd of January,
+1815. Byron was married like one walking in his sleep. He trembled like a
+leaf, made the wrong responses, and almost from the first seems to have
+been conscious of his irrevocable mistake.
+
+ I saw him stand
+ Before an altar with a gentle bride:
+ Her face was fair, but was not that which made
+ The starlight of his boyhood. He could see
+ Not that which was--but that which should have been--
+ But the old mansion, the accustom'd hall.
+ And she who was his destiny came back,
+ And thrust herself between him and the light.
+
+Here we have faint visions of Miss Chaworth, mingling with later memories.
+In handing the bride into the carriage he said, "Miss Milbanke, are you
+ready?"--a mistake said to be of evil omen. Byron never really loved his
+wife; and though he has been absurdly accused of marrying for revenge, we
+must suspect that he married in part for a settlement. On the other hand,
+it is not unfair to say that she was fascinated by a name, and inspired by
+the philanthropic zeal of reforming a literary Corsair. Both were
+disappointed. Miss Milbanke's fortune was mainly settled on herself; and
+Byron, in spite of plentiful resolutions gave little sign of reformation.
+For a considerable time their life, which, after the "treacle moon," as
+the bridegroom called it, spent at Halnaby, near Darlington, was divided
+between residence at Seaham and visits to London, seemed to move smoothly.
+In a letter, evidently mis-dated the 15th December, Mrs. Leigh writes to
+Hodgson: "I have every reason to think that my beloved B. is very happy
+and comfortable. I hear constantly from him and _his rib_. It appears to
+me that Lady B. sets about making him happy in the right way. I had many
+fears. Thank God that they do not appear likely to be realized. In short,
+there seems to me to be but one drawback to all our felicity, and that,
+alas, is the disposal of dear Newstead. I never shall feel reconciled to
+the loss of that sacred revered Abbey. The thought makes me more
+melancholy than perhaps the loss of an inanimate object ought to do. Did
+you ever hear that _landed property_, the GIFT OF THE CROWN, could not be
+sold? Lady B. writes me word that she never saw her father and mother so
+happy; that she believes the latter would go to the bottom of the sea
+herself to find fish for B.'s dinner, &c." Augusta Ada was born in London
+on the 10th of December, 1815. During the next months a few cynical
+mutterings are the only interruptions to an ominous silence; but these
+could be easily explained by the increasing embarrassment of the poet's
+affairs, and the importunity of creditors, who in the course of the last
+half-year had served seven or eight executions on his house and furniture.
+Their expectations were raised by exaggerated reports of his having
+married money; and by a curious pertinacity of pride he still declined,
+even when he had to sell his books, to accept advances from his publisher.
+In January the storm which had been secretly gathering suddenly broke. On
+the 15th, i.e. five weeks after her daughter's birth, Lady Byron left home
+with the infant to pay a visit, as had been agreed, to her own family at
+Kirkby Mallory in Leicestershire. On the way she despatched to her husband
+a tenderly playful letter, which has been often quoted. Shortly afterwards
+he was informed--first by her father, and then by herself--that she did
+not intend ever to return to him. The accounts of their last interview, as
+in the whole evidence bearing on the affair, not only differ but flatly
+contradict one another. On behalf of Lord Byron it is asserted, that his
+wife, infuriated by his offering some innocent hospitality on occasion of
+bad weather to a respectable actress, Mrs. Mardyn, who had called on him
+about Drury Lane business, rushed into the room exclaiming, "I leave you
+for ever"--and did so. According to another story, Lady Byron, finding him
+with a friend, and observing him to be annoyed at her entrance, said, "Am
+I in your way, Byron?" whereupon he answered, "Damnably." Mrs. Leigh,
+Hodgson, Moore, and others, did everything that mutual friends could do to
+bring about the reconciliation for which Byron himself professed to be
+eager, but in vain; and in vain the effort was renewed in later years. The
+wife was inveterately bent on a separation, of the causes of which the
+husband alleged he was never informed, and with regard to which as long as
+he lived she preserved a rigid silence.
+
+For some time after the event Byron spoke of his wife with at least
+apparent generosity. Rightly or wrongly, he blamed her parents, and her
+maid--Mrs. Clermont, the theme of his scathing but not always dignified
+"Sketch;" but of herself he wrote (March 8, 1816), "I do not believe that
+there ever was a brighter, and a kinder, or a more amiable or agreeable
+being than Lady Byron. I never had nor can have any reproach to make to
+her, when with me." Elsewhere he adds, that he would willingly, if he had
+the chance, "renew his marriage on a lease of twenty years." But as time
+passed and his overtures were rejected, his patience gave way, and in some
+of his later satires he even broke the bounds of courtesy. Lady Byron's
+letters at the time of the separation, especially those first published in
+the _Academy_ of July 19, 1879, are to Mrs. Leigh always affectionate and
+confidential, often pathetic, asking her advice "in this critical moment,"
+and protesting that, "independent of malady, she does not think of the
+past with any spirit of resentment, and scarcely with the sense of
+injury." In her communications to Mr. Hodgson, on the other hand--the
+first of almost the same date, the second a few weeks later--she writes
+with intense bitterness, stating that her action was due to offences which
+she could only condone on the supposition of her husband's insanity, and
+distinctly implying that she was in danger of her life. This supposition
+having been by her medical advisers pronounced erroneous, she felt, in the
+words only too pungently recalled in _Don Juan_, that her duty both to man
+and God prescribed her course of action. Her playful letter on leaving she
+seems to defend on the ground of the fear of personal violence. Till Lord
+Byron's death the intimacy between his wife and sister remained unbroken;
+through the latter he continued to send numerous messages to the former,
+and to his child, who became a ward in Chancery; but at a later date it
+began to cool. On the appearance of Lady Byron's letter, in answer to
+Moore's first volume, Augusta speaks of it as "a despicable tirade," feels
+"disgusted at such unfeeling conduct," and thinks "nothing can justify any
+one in defaming the dead." Soon after 1830 they had an open rupture on a
+matter of business, which was never really healed, though the then
+Puritanic precisian sent a message of relenting to Mrs. Leigh on her
+death-bed (1851).
+
+The charge or charges which, during her husband's life, Lady Byron from
+magnanimity or other motive reserved, she is ascertained after his death
+to have delivered with important modifications to various persons, with
+little regard to their capacity for reading evidence or to their
+discretion. On one occasion her choice of a confidante was singularly
+unfortunate. "These," wrote Lord Byron in his youth, "these are the first
+tidings that have ever sounded like fame in my ears--to be redde on the
+banks of the Ohio." Strangely enough, it is from the country of
+Washington, whom the poet was wont to reverence as the purest patriot of
+the modern world, that in 1869 there emanated the hideous story which
+scandalized both continents, and ultimately recoiled on the retailer of
+the scandal. The grounds of the reckless charge have been weighed by those
+who have wished it to prove false, and by those who have wished it to
+prove true, and found wanting. The chaff has been beaten in every way and
+on all sides, without yielding an ounce of grain; and it were ill-advised
+to rake up the noxious dust that alone remains. From nothing left on
+record by either of the two persons most intimately concerned can we
+derive any reliable information. It is plain that Lady Byron was during
+the later years of her life the victim of hallucinations, and that if
+Byron knew the secret, which he denies, he did not choose to tell it,
+putting off Captain Medwin and others with absurdities, as that "He did
+not like to see women eat," or with commonplaces, as "The causes, my dear
+sir, were too simple to be found out."
+
+Thomas Moore, who had the Memoirs[3] supposed to have thrown light on the
+mystery, in the full knowledge of Dr. Lushington's judgment and all the
+gossip of the day, professes to believe that "the causes of disunion did
+not differ from those that loosen the links of most such marriages," and
+writes several pages on the trite theme that great genius is incompatible
+with domestic happiness. Negative instances abound to modify this sweeping
+generalization; but there is a kind of genius, closely associated with
+intense irritability, which it is difficult to subject to the most
+reasonable yoke; and of this sort was Byron's. His valet, Fletcher, is
+reported to have said that "Any woman could manage my lord, except my
+lady;" and Madame De Stael, on reading the _Farewell_, that "She would
+have been glad to have been in Lady Byron's place." But it may be doubted
+if Byron would have made a good husband to any woman; his wife and he were
+even more than usually ill-assorted. A model of the proprieties, and a
+pattern of the learned philanthropy of which in her sex he was wont to
+make a constant butt, she was no fit consort for that "mens insana in
+corpore insano." What could her stolid temperament conjecture of a man
+whom she saw, in one of his fits of passion, throwing a favourite watch
+under the fire, and grinding it to pieces with a poker? Or how could her
+conscious virtue tolerate the recurring irregularities which he was
+accustomed, not only to permit himself, but to parade? The harassment of
+his affairs stimulated his violence, till she was inclined to suspect him
+to be mad. Some of her recently printed letters--as that to Lady Anne
+Barnard, and the reports of later observers of her character--as William
+Howitt, tend to detract from the earlier tributes to her consistent
+amiability, and confirm our ideas of the incompatibility of the pair. It
+must have been trying to a poet to be asked by his wife, impatient of his
+late hours, when he was going to leave off writing verses; to be told he
+had no real enthusiasm; or to have his desk broken open, and its
+compromising contents sent to the persons for whom they were least
+intended. The smouldering elements of discontent may have been fanned by
+the gossip of dependants, or the officious zeal of relatives, and kindled
+into a jealous flame by the ostentation of regard for others beyond the
+circle of his home. Lady Byron doubtless believed some story which, when
+communicated to her legal advisers, led them to the conclusion that the
+mere fact of her believing it made reconciliation impossible; and the
+inveterate obstinacy which lurked beneath her gracious exterior, made her
+cling through life to the substance--not always to the form, whatever that
+may have been--of her first impressions. Her later letters to Mrs. Leigh,
+as that called forth by Moore's _Life_, are certainly as open to the
+charge of self-righteousness, as those of her husband's are to
+self-disparagement.
+
+ [Footnote 3: Captain Trelawney, however, doubts if he ever read them.]
+
+Byron himself somewhere says, "Strength of endurance is worth all the
+talent in the world." "I love the virtues that I cannot share." His own
+courage was all active; he had no power of sustained endurance. At a time
+when his proper refuge was silence, and his prevailing sentiment--for he
+admits he was somehow to blame--should have been remorse, he foolishly
+vented his anger and his grief in verses, most of them either peevish or
+vindictive, and some of which he certainly permitted to be published. "Woe
+to him," exclaims Voltaire, "who says all he could on any subject!" Woe to
+him, he might have added, who says anything at all on the subject of his
+domestic troubles! The poet's want of reticence at this crisis started a
+host of conjectures, accusations, and calumnies, the outcome, in some
+degree at least, of the rancorous jealousy of men of whose adulation he
+was weary. Then began that burst of British virtue on which Macaulay has
+expatiated, and at which the social critics of the continent have laughed.
+Cottle, Cato, Oxoniensis, Delia, and Styles, were let loose, and they
+anticipated the _Saturday_ and the _Spectator_ of 1869, so that the latter
+might well have exclaimed, "Pereant qui ante nos nostra dixerunt." Byron
+was accused of every possible and impossible vice, he was compared to
+Sardanapalus, Nero, Tiberius, the Duke of Orleans, Heliogabalus, and
+Satan--all the most disreputable persons mentioned in sacred and profane
+history; his benevolences were maligned, his most disinterested actions
+perverted. Mrs. Mardyn, the actress, was on his account, on one occasion,
+driven off the public stage. He was advised not to go to the theatres,
+lest he should be hissed; nor to Parliament, lest he should be insulted.
+On the very day of his departure a friend told him that he feared violence
+from mobs assembling at the door of his carriage. "Upon what grounds," the
+poet writes, in a trenchant survey of the circumstances, in August, 1819,
+"the public formed their opinion, I am not aware; but it was general, and
+it was decisive. Of me and of mine they knew little, except that I had
+written poetry, was a nobleman, bad married, became a father, and was
+involved in differences with my wife and her relatives--no one knew why,
+because the persons complaining refused to state their grievances.
+
+"The press was active and scurrilous;.. my name--which had been a
+knightly or a noble one since my fathers helped to conquer the kingdom for
+William the Norman--was tainted. I felt that, if what was whispered and
+muttered and murmured was true, I was unfit for England; if false, England
+was unfit for me. I withdrew; but this was not enough. In other
+countries--in Switzerland, in the shadow of the Alps, and by the blue
+depth of the lakes--I was pursued and breathed upon by the same blight. I
+crossed the mountains, but it was the same; so I went a little farther,
+and settled myself by the waves of the Adriatic, like the stag at bay, who
+betakes himself to the waters."
+
+On the 16th of April, 1816, shortly before his departure, he wrote to Mr.
+Rogers: "My sister is now with me, and leaves town to-morrow. We shall not
+meet again for some time, at all events, if ever (it was their final
+meeting), and under these circumstances I trust to stand excused to you
+and Mr. Sheridan for being unable to wait upon him this evening." In all
+this storm and stress, Byron's one refuge was in the affection which rises
+like a well of purity amid the passions of his turbid life.
+
+ In the desert a fountain is springing,
+ In the wild waste there still is a tree;
+ And a bird in the solitude singing,
+ That speaks to my spirit of thee.
+
+The fashionable world was tired of its spoilt child, and he of it. Hunted
+out of the country, bankrupt in purse and heart, he left it, never to
+return; but he left it to find fresh inspiration by the "rushing of the
+arrowy Rhone," and under Italian skies to write the works which have
+immortalized his name.
+
+
+ DESCENT OF LADY BYRON AND LADY C. LAMB
+
+
+Earl Spencer. Sir Ralph Milbanke. Viscount Wentworth
+ | _________________|_______________ |
+ | | | |
+Henrietta Elizabeth (Lady Melbourne) Sir Ralph + Judith Noel
+Frances. | m. Viscount Melbourne. |
+ + | |
+F. Ponsonby | Lord Byron + Anna Isabella.
+(Earl of | |
+Bessborough). | Augusta Ada.
+ | |
+ | |
+Lady Caroline + William Lamb.
+
+
+ DESCENT OF ALLEGRA
+
+ William Godwin.
+ Married 1st + Mary Woolstonecraft. 2nd Mrs. Clairmont.
+ | She had by previous |
+ | alliance |
+ | | Claire Claremont + Byron.
+P. B. Shelley + Mary Godwin Fanny Imlay. |
+ Allegra.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+
+LIFE ABROAD--SWITZERLAND TO VENICE--THIRD PERIOD OF AUTHORSHIP.--CHILDE
+HAROLD, III., IV.--MANFRED.
+
+On the 25th of April, 1816, Byron embarked for Ostend. From the "burning
+marl" of the staring streets he planted his foot again on the dock with a
+genuine exultation.
+
+ Once more upon the waters, yet once more,
+ And the waves bound beneath me as a steed
+ That knows her rider. Welcome to the roar!
+
+But he brought with him a relic of English extravagance, sotting out on
+his land travels in a huge coach, copied from that of Napoleon taken at
+Genappe, and being accompanied by Fletcher, Rushton, Berger, a Swiss, and
+Polidori, a physician of Italian descent, son of Alfieri's secretary, a
+man of some talent but indiscreet. A question arises as to the source from
+which he obtained the means for these and subsequent luxuries, in striking
+contrast with Goldsmith's walking-stick, knapsack, and flute. Byron's
+financial affairs are almost inextricably confused. We can, for instance,
+nowhere find a clear statement of the result of the suit regarding the
+Rochdale Estates, save that he lost it before the Court of Exchequer, and
+that his appeal to the House of Lords was still unsettled in 1822. The
+sale of Newstead to Colonel Wildman in 1818, for 90,000 _l_., went mostly
+to pay off mortgages and debts. In April, 1819, Mrs. Leigh writes, after a
+last sigh over this event:--"Sixty thousand pounds was secured by his
+(Byron's) marriage settlement, the interest of which he receives for life,
+and which ought to make him very comfortable." This is unfortunately
+decisive of the fact that he did not in spirit adhere to the resolution
+expressed to Moore never to touch a farthing of his wife's money, though
+we may accept his statement to Medwin, that he twice repaid the dowry of
+10,000 _l_. brought to him at the marriage, as in so far diminishing the
+obligation. None of the capital of Lady Byron's family came under his
+control till 1822, when, on the death of her mother, Lady Noel, Byron
+arranged the appointment of referees, Sir Francis Burdett on his behalf,
+Lord Dacre on his wife's. The result was an equal division of a property
+worth about 7000 _l_ a year. While in Italy the poet received besides
+about 10,000 _l_ for his writings--4000 _l_. being given for _Childe
+Harold_ (iii., iv.), and _Manfred_. "Ne pas etre dupe" was one of his
+determinations, and, though he began by caring little for making money, he
+was always fond of spending it. "I tell you it is too much," he said to
+Murray, in returning a thousand guineas for the _Corinth_ and _Partsina_.
+Hodgson, Moore, Bland, Thomas Ashe, the family of Lord Falkland, the
+British Consul at Venice, and a host of others, were ready to testify to
+his superb munificence. On the other hand, he would stint his pleasures,
+or his benevolences, which were among them, for no one; and when he found
+that to spend money he had to make it, he saw neither rhyme nor reason in
+accepting less than his due. In 1817 he begins to dun Murray, declaring,
+with a frankness in which we can find no fault, "You offer 1500 guineas
+for the new canto (_C. H_., iv.). I won't take it. I ask 2500 guineas for
+it, which you will either give or not, as you think proper." During the
+remaining years of his life he grew more and more exact, driving hard
+bargains for his houses, horses, and boats, and fitting himself, had he
+lived, to be Chancellor of the Exchequer in the newly-liberated State,
+from which he took a bond securing a fair interest for his loan. He made
+out an account in _L. s. d_. against the ungrateful Dallas, and when Leigh
+Hunt threatened to sponge upon him he got a harsh reception; but there is
+nothing to countenance the view that Byron was ever really possessed by
+the "good old gentlemanly vice" of which lie wrote. The Skimpoles and
+Chadbands of the world are always inclined to talk of filthy lucre: it is
+equally a fashion of really lavish people to boast that they are good men
+of business.
+
+We have only a few glimpses of Byron's progress. At Brussels the
+Napoleonic coach was set aside for a more serviceable caleche. During his
+stay in the Belgian capital lie paid a visit to the scene of Waterloo,
+wrote the famous stanzas beginning, "Stop, for thy tread is on an empire's
+dust!" and in unpatriotic prose, recorded his impressions of a plain which
+appeared to him to "want little but a better cause" to make it vie in
+interest with those of Platea and Marathon.
+
+The rest of his journey lay up the Rhine to Basle, thence to Berne,
+Lausanne, and Geneva, where he settled for a time at the Hotel Secheron,
+on the western shore of the lake. Here began the most interesting literary
+relationship of his life, for here he first came in contact with the
+impassioned Ariel of English verse, Percy Bysshe Shelley. They lived in
+proximity after they left the hotel, Shelley's headquarters being at Mont
+Alegre, and Byron's for the remainder of the summer at the Villa Diodati;
+and their acquaintance rapidly ripened into an intimacy which, with some
+interruptions, extended over the six remaining years of their joint lives.
+The place for an estimate of their mutual influence belongs to the time of
+their Italian partnership. Meanwhile, we hear of them mainly as
+fellow-excursionists about the lake, which on one occasion departing from
+its placid poetical character, all but swallowed them both, along with
+Hobhouse, off Meillerie. "The boat," says Byron, "was nearly wrecked near
+the very spot where St. Preux and Julia were in danger of being drowned.
+It would have been classical to have been lost there, but not agreeable. I
+ran no risk, being so near the rocks and a good swimmer; but our party
+wore wet and incommoded." The only anxiety of Shelley, who could not swim,
+was, that no one else should risk a life for his. Two such revolutionary
+or such brave poets were, in all probability, never before nor since in a
+storm in a boat together. During this period Byron complains of being
+still persecuted. "I was in a wretched state of health and worse spirits
+when I was in Geneva; but quiet and the lake--better physicians than
+Polidori--soon set me up. I never led so moral a life as during my
+residence in that country, but I gained no credit by it. On the contrary,
+there is no story so absurd that they did not invent at my cost. I was
+watched by glasses on the opposite side of the lake, and by glasses, too,
+that must have had very distorted optics. I was waylaid in my evening
+drives. I believe they looked upon me as a man-monster." Shortly after his
+arrival in Switzerland he contracted an intimacy with Miss Clairmont, a
+daughter of Godwin's second wife, and consequently a connexion by marriage
+of the Shelleys, with whom she was living, which resulted in the birth of
+a daughter, Allegra, at Great Marlow, in February, 1817. The noticeable
+events of the following two months are a joint excursion to Chamouni, and
+a visit in July to Madame de Stael at Coppet, in the course of which he
+met Frederick Schlegel. During a wet week, when the families were reading
+together some German ghost stories, an idea occurred of imitating them,
+the main result of which was Mrs. Shelley's _Frankenstein_. Byron
+contributed to the scheme a fragment of _The Vampire_, afterwards
+completed and published in the name of his patron by Polidori. The
+eccentricities of this otherwise amiable physician now began to give
+serious annoyance; his jealousy of Shelley grew to such a pitch that it
+resulted in the doctor's giving a challenge to the poet, at which the
+latter only laughed; but Byron, to stop further outbreaks of the kind,
+remarked, "Recollect that, though Shelley has scruples about duelling, I
+have none, and shall be at all times ready to take his place." Polidori
+had ultimately to be dismissed, and, after some years of vicissitude,
+committed suicide.
+
+The Shelleys left for England in September, and Byron made an excursion
+with Hobhouse through the Bernese Oberland. They went by the Col de Jaman
+and the Simmenthal to Thun; then up the valley to the Staubbach, which he
+compares to the tail of the pale horse in the Apocalypse--not a very
+happy, though a striking comparison. Thence they proceeded over the
+Wengern to Grindelwald and the Rosenlau glacier; then back by Berne,
+Friburg, and Yverdun to Diodati. The following passage in reference to
+this tour may be selected as a specimen of his prose description, and of
+the ideas of mountaineering before the days of the Alpine Club:--
+
+"Before ascending the mountain, went to the torrent again, the sun upon it
+forming a rainbow of the lower part, of all colours but principally purple
+and gold, the bow moving as you move. I never saw anything like this; it
+is only in the sunshine.... Left the horses, took off my coat, and went to
+the summit, 7000 English feet above the level of the sea, and 5000 feet
+above the valley we left in the morning. On one side our view comprised
+the Jungfrau, with all her glaciers; then the Dent d'Argent, shining like
+truth; then the Eighers and the Wetterhorn. Heard the avalanches falling
+every five minutes. From where we stood on the Wengern Alp we had all
+these in view on one side; on the other, the clouds rose up from the
+opposite valley, curling up perpendicular precipices, like the foam of the
+ocean of hell during a spring tide; it was white and sulphury, and
+immeasurably deep in appearance.... Arrived at the Grindelwald; dined;
+mounted again, and rode to the higher glacier--like a frozen hurricane;
+starlight beautiful, but a devil of a path. Passed whole woods of withered
+pines, all withered; trunks stripped and barkless, branches lifeless; done
+by a single winter. Their appearance reminded me of me and my family."
+
+Students of _Manfred_ will recognize whole sentences, only slightly
+modified in its verse. Though Byron talks with contempt of authorship,
+there is scarce a fine phrase in his letters or journal which is not
+pressed into the author's service. He turns his deepest griefs to artistic
+gain, and uses five or six times for literary purposes the expression
+which seems to have dropped from him naturally about his household gods
+being shivered on his hearth. His account of this excursion concludes with
+a passage equally characteristic of his melancholy and incessant
+self-consciousness:--
+
+"In the weather for this tour, I have been very fortunate.... I was
+disposed to be pleased. I am a lover of nature, &c.... But in all this the
+recollection of bitterness, and more especially of recent and more home
+desolation, which must accompany me through life, have preyed upon me
+here; and neither the music of the shepherd, the crashing of the
+avalanche, the torrent, the mountain, the glacier, the forest, nor the
+cloud, have for one moment lightened the weight upon my heart, nor enabled
+me to lose my own wretched identity in the majesty, and the power, and the
+glory around, above, and beneath me."
+
+Such egotism in an idle man would only provoke impatience; but Byron was,
+during the whole of this period, almost preternaturally active. Detained
+by bad weather at Ouchy for two days (Juno 26, 27), he wrote the _Prisoner
+of Chillon_, which, with its noble introductory sonnet on Bonnivard, in
+some respects surpasses any of his early romances. The opening lines,--
+
+ Lake Leman lies by Chillon's walls;
+ A thousand feet in depth below,
+ Its massy waters meet and flow,--
+
+bring before us in a few words the conditions of a hopeless bondage. The
+account of the prisoner himself, and of the lingering deaths of the
+brothers; the first frenzy of the survivor, and the desolation which
+succeeds it--
+
+ I only loved: I only drew
+ The accursed breath of dungeon dew,--
+
+the bird's song breaking on the night of his solitude; his growing
+enamoured of despair, and regaining his freedom with a sigh, are all
+strokes from a master hand. From the same place, at the same date, he
+announces to Murray the completion of the third canto of _Childe Harold_.
+The productiveness of July is portentous. During that month he wrote the
+_Monody on Sheridan, The Dream, Churchill's Grave_, the _Sonnet to Lake
+Leman, Could I remount the River of my Years_, part of _Manfred,
+Prometheus_, the _Stanzas to Augusta_, beginning,
+
+ My sister! My sweet sister! If a name
+ Dearer and purer were, it should be thine;
+
+and the terrible dream of _Darkness_, which at least in the ghastly power
+of the close, where the survivors meet by the lurid light of a dim altar
+fire, and die of each other's hideousness, surpasses Campbell's _Last
+Man_[1]. At Lausanne the poet made a pilgrimage to the haunts of Gibbon,
+broke a sprig from his acacia-tree, and carried off some rose leaves from
+his garden. Though entertaining friends, among them Mr. M.G. Lewis and
+Scrope Davies, he systematically shunned "the locust swarm of English
+tourists," remarking on their obtrusive platitudes; as when he heard one
+of them at Chamouni inquire, "Did you ever see anything more truly rural?"
+Ultimately he got tired of the Calvinistic Genevese--one of whom is said
+to have swooned as he entered the room--and early in October set out with
+Hobhouse for Italy. They crossed the Simplon, and proceeded by the Lago
+Maggiore to Milan, admiring the pass, but slighting the somewhat hothouse
+beauties of the Borromean Islands. From Milan he writes, pronouncing its
+cathedral to be only a little inferior to that of Seville, and delighted
+with "a correspondence, all original and amatory, between Lucretia Borgia
+and Cardinal Bembo." He secured a lock of the golden hair of the Pope's
+daughter, and wished himself a cardinal.
+
+ [Footnote 1: This only appeared in 1831, but Campbell claims to have
+ given Byron in conversation the suggestion of the subject.]
+
+At Verona, Byron dilates on the amphitheatre, as surpassing anything he
+had seen even in Greece, and on the faith of the people in the story of
+Juliet, from whose reputed tomb he sent some pieces of granite to Ada and
+his nieces. In November we find him settled in Venice, "the greenest isle
+of his imagination." There he began to form those questionable alliances
+which are so marked a feature of his life, and so frequent a theme in his
+letters, that it is impossible to pass them without notice. The first of
+his temporary idols was Mariana Segati, "the wife of a merchant of
+Venice," for some time his landlord. With this woman, whom he describes as
+an antelope with oriental eyes, wavy hair, voice like the cooing of a
+dove, and the spirit of a Bacchante, he remained on terms of intimacy
+for about eighteen months, during which their mutual devotion was only
+disturbed by some outbursts of jealousy. In December the poet took lessons
+in Armenian, glad to find in the study something craggy to break his mind
+upon. Ho translated into that language a portion of St. Paul's Epistle to
+the Corinthians. Notes on the carnival, praises of _Christabel_,
+instructions about the printing of _Childe Harold_ (iii.), protests
+against the publication under his name of some spurious "domestic poems,"
+and constant references, doubtfully domestic, to his Adriatic lady, fill
+up the records of 1816. On February 15, 1817, he announces to Murray the
+completion of the first sketch of _Manfred_, and alludes to it in a
+bantering manner as "a kind of poem in dialogue, of a wild metaphysical
+and inexplicable kind;" concluding, "I have at least rendered it _quite
+impossible_ for the stage, for which my intercourse with Drury Lane has
+given me the greatest contempt."
+
+About this time Byron seems to have entertained the idea of returning to
+England in the spring, i.e. after a year's absence. This design, however,
+was soon set aside, partly in consequence of a slow malarian fever, by
+which he was prostrated for several weeks. On his partial recovery,
+attributed to his having had neither medicine nor doctor, and a
+determination to live till he had "put one or two people out of the
+world," he started on an expedition to Rome.
+
+His first stage was Arqua; then Ferrara, where he was inspired, by a sight
+of the Italian poet's prison, with the _Lament of Tasso_; the next,
+Florence, where he describes himself as drunk with the beauty of the
+galleries. Among the pictures, he was most impressed with the mistresses
+of Raphael and Titian, to whom, along with Giorgione, he is always
+reverential; and he recognized in Santa Croce the Westminster Abbey of
+Italy. Passing through Foligno, he reached his destination early in May,
+and met his old friends, Lord Lansdowne and Hobhouse. The poet employed
+his short time at Rome in visiting on horseback the most famous sites in
+the city and neighbourhood--as the Alban Mount, Tivoli, Frascati, the
+Falls of Terni, and the Clitumnus--re-casting the crude first draft of the
+third act of _Manfred_, and sitting for his bust to Thorwaldsen. Of this
+sitting the sculptor afterwards gave some account to his compatriot, Hans
+Andersen: "Byron placed himself opposite to me, but at once began to put
+on a quite different expression from that usual to him. 'Will you not sit
+still?' said I. 'You need not assume that look.' 'That is my expression,'
+said Byron. 'Indeed,' said I; and I then represented him as I wished. When
+the bust was finished he said, 'It is not at all like me; my expression is
+more unhappy.'" West, the American, who five years later painted his
+lordship at Leghorn, substantiates the above half-satirical anecdote, by
+the remark, "He was a bad sitter; he assumed a countenance that did not
+belong to him, as though he were thinking of a frontispiece for _Chlde
+Harold_." Thorwaldsen's bust, the first cast of which was sent to
+Hobhouse, and pronounced by Mrs. Leigh to be the best of the numerous
+likenesses of her brother, was often repeated. Professor Brandes, of
+Copenhagen, introduces his striking sketch of the poet by a reference to
+the model, that has its natural place in the museum named from the great
+sculptor whose genius had flung into the clay the features of a character
+so unlike his own. The bust, says the Danish critic, at first sight
+impresses one with an undefinable classic grace; on closer examination the
+restlessness of a life is reflected in a brow over which clouds seem to
+hover, but clouds from which we look for lightnings. The dominant
+impression of the whole is that of some irresistible power
+(Unwiderstehlichkeit). Thorwaldsen, at a much later date (1829-1833)
+executed the marble statue, first intended for the Abbey, which is now to
+be seen in the library of Trinity College, in evidence that Cambridge is
+still proud of her most brilliant son.
+
+Towards the close of the month--after almost fainting at the execution by
+guillotine of three bandits--he professes impatience to get back to
+Mariana, and early in the next we find him established with her near
+Venice, at the villa of La Mira, where for some time he continued to
+reside. His letters of June refer to the sale of Newstead, the mistake of
+Mrs. Leigh and others in attributing to him the _Tales of a Landlord_, the
+appearance of _Lalla Rookh_, preparations for _Marino Faliero_, and the
+progress of _Childe Harold_ iv. This poem, completed in September, and
+published early in 1818 (with a dedication to Hobhouse, who had supplied
+most of the illustrative notes), first made manifest the range of the
+poet's power. Only another slope of ascent lay between him and the
+pinnacle, over which shines the red star of _Cain_. Had Lord Byron's
+public career closed when he left England, he would have been remembered
+for a generation as the author of some musical minor verses, a clever
+satire, a journal in verse exhibiting flashes of genius, and a series of
+fascinating romances--also giving promise of higher power--which had
+enjoyed a marvellous popularity. The third and fourth cantos of _Childe
+Harold_ placed him on another platform, that of the _Dii Majores_ of
+English verse. These cantos are separated from their predecessors, not by
+a stage, but by a gulf. Previous to their publication he had only shown
+how far the force of rhapsody could go; now he struck with his right hand,
+and from the shoulder. Knowledge of life and study of Nature were the
+mainsprings of a growth which the indirect influence of Wordsworth, and
+the happy companionship of Shelley, played their part in fostering.
+Faultlessness is seldom a characteristic of impetuous verse, never of
+Byron's; and even in the later parts of the _Childe_ there are careless
+lines, and doubtful images. "Self-exiled Harold wanders forth again,"
+looking "pale and interesting;" but we are soon refreshed by a higher
+note. No familiarity can distract from "Waterloo," which holds its own by
+Barbour's "Bannockburn," and Scott's "Flodden." Sir Walter, referring to
+the climax of the opening, and the pathetic lament of the closing lines,
+generously doubts whether any verses in English surpass them in vigour.
+There follows "The Broken Mirror," extolled by Jeffrey with an
+appreciation of its exuberance of fancy, and negligence of diction; and
+then the masterly sketch of Napoleon, with the implied reference to the
+writer at the end.
+
+The descriptions in both cantos perpetually rise from a basis of rhetoric
+to a real height of poetry. Byron's "Rhine" flows, like the river itself,
+in a stream of "exulting and abounding" stanzas. His "Venice" may be set
+beside the masterpieces of Ruskin's prose. They are together the joint
+pride of Italy and England. The tempest in the third canto is in verse a
+splendid microcosm of the favourites, if not the prevailing mood, of the
+writer's mind. In spite of manifest flaws, the nine stanzas beginning "It
+is the hush of night," have enough in them to feed a high reputation. The
+poet's dying day, his sun and moon contending over the Rhaetian hill, his
+Thrasymene, Clitumnus, and Velino, show that his eye has grown keener, and
+his imagery at least more terse, and that he can occasionally forgot
+himself in his surroundings. The Drachenfels, Ehrenbreitstein, the Alps,
+Lake Leman, pass before us like a series of dissolving views. But the
+stability of the book depends on its being a Temple of Fame, as well as a
+Diorama of Scenery. It is no mere versified Guide, because every
+resting-place in the pilgrimage is made interesting by association with
+illustrious memories. Coblontz introduces the tribute to Marceau; Clarens
+an almost complete review, in five verses, of Rousseau; Lausanne and
+Ferney the quintessence of criticism on Gibbon and Voltaire. A tomb in
+Arqua suggests Petrarch; the grass-grown streets of Ferrara lead in the
+lines on Tasso; the white walls of the Etrurian Athens bring back
+Alfieri and Michael Angelo, and the prose bard of the hundred tales, and
+Dante, "buried by the upbraiding shore," and--
+
+ The starry Galileo and his woes.
+
+Byron has made himself so master of the glories and the wrecks of Rome,
+that almost everything else that has been said of them seems superfluous.
+Hawthorne, in his _Marble Fawn_, comes nearest to him; but Byron's
+Gladiator and Apollo, if not his Laocoon, are unequalled. "The voice of
+Marius," says Scott, "could not sound more deep and solemn among the ruins
+of Carthage, than the strains of the pilgrim among the broken shrines and
+fallen statues of her subduer." As the third canto has a fitting close
+with the poet's pathetic remembrance of his daughter, so the fourth is
+wound up with consummate art,--the memorable dirge on the Princess
+Charlotte being followed by the address to the sea, which, enduring
+unwrinkled through all its ebbs and flows, seems to mock at the mutability
+of human life.
+
+_Manfred_, his witch drama, as the author called it, has had a special
+attraction for inquisitive biographers, because it has been supposed in
+some dark manner to reveal the secrets of his prison house. Its lines have
+been tortured, like the witches of the seventeenth century, to extort from
+them the meaning of the "all nameless hour," and every conceivable horror
+has been alleged as its _motif_. On this subject Goethe writes with a
+humorous simplicity: "This singularly intellectual poet has extracted from
+my _Faust_ the strongest nourishment for his hypochondria; but he has made
+use of the impelling principles for his own purposes.... When a bold and
+enterprising young man, he won the affections of a Florentine lady. Her
+husband discovered the amour, and murdered his wife; but the murderer was
+the same night found dead in the street, and there was no one to whom any
+suspicion could be attached. Lord Byron removed from Florence, but these
+spirits have haunted him all his life. This romantic incident explains
+innumerable allusions," e.g.,--
+
+ I have shed
+ Blood, but not hers,--and yet her blood was shed.
+
+Were it not for the fact that the poet had never seen the city in question
+when he wrote the poem, this explanation would be more plausible than most
+others, for the allusions are all to some lady who has been done to death.
+Galt asserts that the plot turns on a tradition of unhallowed
+necromancy--a human sacrifice, like that of Antinous attributed to
+Hadrian. Byron himself says it has no plot, but he kept teasing his
+questioners with mysterious hints, e.g. "It was the Staubbach and the
+Jungfrau, and something else more than Faustus, which made me write
+_Manfred_;" and of one of his critics he says to Murray, "It had a better
+origin than he can devise or divine, for the soul of him." In any case
+most methods of reading between its lines would, if similarly applied,
+convict Sophocles, Schiller, and Shelley of incest, Shakespeare of murder,
+Milton of blasphemy, Scott of forgery, Marlowe and Goethe of compacts with
+the devil. Byron was no dramatist, but he had wit enough to vary at least
+the circumstances of his projected personality. The memories of both
+Fausts--the Elizabethan and the German--mingle, in the pages of this
+piece, with shadows of the author's life; but to these it never gives, nor
+could be intended to give, any substantial form.
+
+_Manfred_ is a chaos of pictures, suggested by the scenery of
+Lauterbrunnen and Grindelwald, half animated by vague personifications and
+sensational narrative. Like _Harold_, and Scott's _Marmion_, it just
+misses being a great poem. The Coliseum is its masterpiece of description,
+the appeal, "Astarte, my beloved, speak to me," its nearest approach to
+pathos. The lonely death of the hero makes an effective close to the moral
+tumult of the preceding scenes. But the reflections, often striking, are
+seldom absolutely fresh: that beginning,
+
+ The mind, which is immortal, makes itself
+ Requital for its good or evil thoughts,
+ Is its own origin of ill and end,
+ And its own place and time,
+
+is transplanted from Milton with as little change as Milton made in
+transplanting it from Marlowe. The author's own favourite passage, the
+invocation to the sun (act iii., sc. 2), has some sublimity, marred by
+lapses. The lyrics scattered through the poem sometimes open well,
+e.g.,--
+
+ Mont Blanc is the monarch of mountains;
+ They crowned him long ago,
+ On a throne of rocks, in a robe of clouds,
+ With a null of snow;
+
+but they cannot sustain themselves like true song-birds, and fall to the
+ground like spent rockets. This applies to Byron's lyrics generally; turn
+to the incantation in the _Deformed Transformed_: the first line and a
+half are in tune,--
+
+ Beautiful shadow of Thetis's boy,
+ Who sleeps in the meadow whose grass grows o'er Troy.
+
+Nor Sternhold nor Hopkins has more ruthlessly outraged our ears than the
+next two--
+
+ From the red earth, like Adam, thy likeness I shape,
+ As the Being who made him, whose actions I ape(!)
+
+Of his songs: "There be none of Beauty's daughters," "She walks in
+beauty," "Maid of Athens," "I enter thy garden of roses," the translation
+"Sons of the Greeks," and others, have a flow and verve that it is
+pedantry to ignore; but in general Byron was too much of the earth earthy
+to be a great lyrist. Some of the greatest have lived wild lives, but
+their wings were not weighted with the lead of the love of the world.
+
+The summer and early months of the autumn of 1817 were spent at La Mira,
+and much of the poet's time was occupied in riding along the banks of the
+Brenta, often in the company of the few congenial Englishmen who came in
+his way; others, whom he avoided, avenged themselves by retailing stories,
+none of which wore "too improbable for the craving appetites of their
+slander-loving countrymen." In August he received a visit from Mr.
+Hobhouse, and on this occasion drew up the remarkable document afterwards
+given to Mr. M. G. Lewis for circulation in England, which appeared in the
+_Academy_ of October 9th, 1869. In this document he says, "It has been
+intimated to me that the persons understood to be the legal advisers of
+Lady Byron have declared their lips to be sealed up on the cause of the
+separation between her and myself. If their lips are sealed up they are
+not sealed up by me, and the greatest favour they can confer upon me will
+be to open them." He goes on to state, that he repents having consented to
+the separation--will be glad to cancel the deed, or to go before any
+tribunal, to discuss the matter in the most public manner; adding, that
+Mr. Hobhouse (in whose presence he was writing) proposed, on his part, to
+go into court, and ending with a renewed asseveration of his ignorance of
+the allegations against him, and his inability to understand for what
+purpose they had been kept back, "unless it was to sanction the most
+infamous calumnies by silence." Hobhouse, and others, during the four
+succeeding years, ineffectually endeavoured to persuade the poet to return
+to England. Moore and others insist that Byron's heart was at home when
+his presence was abroad, and that, with all her faults, he loved his
+country still. Leigh Hunt, on the contrary, asserts that he cared nothing
+for England or its affairs. Like many men of genius, Byron was never
+satisfied with what he had at the time. "Romae Tibur amem ventosus Tibure
+Romam." At Seaham he is bored to death, and pants for the excitement of
+the clubs; in London society he longs for a desert or island in the
+Cyclades; after their separation, he begins to regret his wife; after his
+exile, his country. "Where," he exclaimed to Hobhouse, "is real comfort to
+be found out of England?" He frequently fell into the mood in which he
+wrote the verse,--
+
+ Yet I was born where men are proud to be,
+ Not without cause: and should I leave behind
+ Th'immortal island of the sage and free,
+ And seek me out a home by a remoter sea?
+
+But the following, to Murray (June 7, 1819), is equally sincere. "Some of
+the epitaphs at Ferrara pleased me more than the more splendid monuments
+of Bologna; for instance--
+
+ 'Martini Luigi
+ Implora pace.'
+
+ 'Lucrezia Picini
+ Implora eterna quiete.'"
+
+Can anything be more full of pathos? These few words say all that can be
+said or sought; the dead had had enough of life; all they wanted was rest,
+and this they implore. There is all the helplessness, and humble hope, and
+death-like prayer that can arise from the grave--'implora pace.' "I hope,
+whoever may survive me, and shall see me put in the foreigner's
+burying-ground at the Lido, within the fortress by the Adriatic, will see
+these two words, and no more, put over me. I trust they won't think of
+pickling and bringing me home to Clod, or Blunderbuss Hall. I am sure my
+bones would not rest in an English grave, or my clay mix with the earth of
+that country." Hunt's view is, in this as in other subtle respects, nearer
+the truth than Moore's; for with all Byron's insight into Italian vice, he
+hated more the master vice of England--hypocrisy; and much of his
+greatest, and in a sense latest, because unfinished work, is the severest,
+as it might be the wholesomest, satire ever directed against a great
+nation since the days of Juvenal and Tacitus.
+
+In September (1817) Byron entered into negotiations, afterwards completed,
+for renting a country house among the Euganean hills near Este, from Mr.
+Hoppner, the English Consul at Venice, who bears frequent testimony to his
+kindness and courtesy. In October we find him settled for the winter in
+Venice, where he first occupied his old quarters, in the Spezieria, and
+afterwards hired one of the palaces of the Countess Mocenigo on the Grand
+Canal. Between this mansion, the cottage at Este, and the villa of La
+Mira, he divided his time for the next two years. During the earlier part
+of his Venetian career he had continued to frequent the salon of the
+Countess Albrizzi, where he met with people of both sexes of some rank and
+standing who appreciated his genius, though some among them fell into
+absurd mistakes. A gentleman of the company informing the hostess, in
+answer to some inquiry regarding Canova's busts, that Washington, the
+American President, was shot in a duel by Burke, "What, in the name of
+folly, are you thinking of?" said Byron, perceiving that the speaker was
+confounding Washington with Hamilton, and Burke with Burr. He afterwards
+transferred himself to the rival coterie of the Countess Benzoni, and gave
+himself up with little reserve to the intrigues which cast discredit on
+this portion of his life. Nothing is so conducive to dissipation as
+despair, and Byron had begun to regard the Sea-Cybele as a Sea-Sodom--when
+he wrote, "To watch a city die daily, as she does, is a sad contemplation.
+I sought to distract my mind from a sense of her desolation and my own
+solitude, by plunging into a vortex that was anything but pleasure." In
+any case, he forsook the "Dame," and, by what his biographer calls a
+"descent in the scale of refinement, for which nothing but the wayward
+state of his mind can account," sought the companions of his leisure hours
+among the wearers of the "fazzioli." The carnivals of the years 1818,
+1819, mark the height of his excesses. Early in the former, Mariana Segati
+fell out of favour, owing to Byron's having detected her in selling the
+jewels he had given as presents, and so being led to suspect a large
+mercenary element in her devotion. To her succeeded Margarita Cogni, the
+wife of a baker who proved as accommodating as his predecessor, the
+linen-draper. This woman was decidedly a character, and Senor Castelar has
+almost elevated her into a heroine. A handsome virago, with brown
+shoulders, and black hair, endowed with the strength of an Amazon, "a face
+like Faustina's, and the figure of a Juno--tall and energetic as a
+pythoness," she quartered herself for twelve months in the palace as
+"Donna di governo," and drove the servants about without let or hindrance.
+Unable to read or write she intercepted his lordship's letters to little
+purpose; but she had great natural business talents, reduced by one half
+the expenses of his household, kept everything in good order, and, when
+her violences roused his wrath, turned it off with some ready retort or
+witticism. She was very devout, and would cross herself three times at the
+Angelus. One instance, of a different kind of devotion, from Byron's own
+account, is sufficiently graphic:--"In the autumn one day, going to the
+Lido with my gondoliers, we were overtaken by a heavy squall, and the
+gondola put in peril, hats blown away, boat filling, oar lost, tumbling
+sea, thunder, rain in torrents, and wind unceasing. On our return, after a
+tight struggle, I found her on the open stops of the Mocenigo Palace on
+the Grand Canal, with her great black eyes flashing through her tears, and
+the long dark hair which was streaming, drenched with rain, over her
+brows. She was perfectly exposed to the storm; and the wind blowing her
+dress about her thin figure, and the lightning flashing round her, made
+her look like Medea alighted from her chariot, or the Sibyl of the tempest
+that was rolling around her, the only living thing within hail at that
+moment, except ourselves. On seeing me safe she did not wait to greet me,
+as might have been expected; but, calling out to me, 'Ah! can' della
+Madonna, xe esto il tempo per andar' al' Lido,' ran into the house, and
+solaced herself with scolding the boatmen for not foreseeing the
+'temporale.' Her joy at seeing me again was moderately mixed with
+ferocity, and gave me the idea of a tigress over her recovered cubs."
+
+Some months after she became ungovernable--threw plates about, and
+snatched caps from the heads of other women who looked at her lord in
+public places. Byron told her she must go home; whereupon she proceeded to
+break glass, and threaten "knives, poison, fire;" and on his calling his
+boatmen to get ready the gondola, threw herself in the dark night into the
+canal. She was rescued, and in a few days finally dismissed; after which
+he saw her only twice, at the theatre. Her whole picture is more like that
+of Theroigne de Mericourt than that of Raphael's Fornarina, whose name she
+received.
+
+Other stories, of course, gathered round this strange life--personal
+encounters, aquatic feats, and all manner of romantic and impossible
+episodes; their basis being, that Byron on one occasion thrashed, on
+another challenged, a man who tried to cheat him, was a frequent rider,
+and a constant swimmer, so that he came to be called "the English fish,"
+"water-spaniel," "sea-devil," &c. One of the boatmen is reported to have
+said, "He is a good gondolier, spoilt by being a poet and a lord;" and in
+answer to a traveller's inquiry, "Where does he get his poetry?" "He dives
+for it." His habits, as regards eating, seem to have been generally
+abstemious; but he drank a pint of gin and water over his verses at night,
+and then took claret and soda in the morning.
+
+Riotous living may have helped to curtail Byron's life, but it does not
+seem to have seriously impaired his powers. Among these adverse
+surroundings of the "court of Circe," he threw off _Beppo_, _Mazeppa_, and
+the early books of _Don Juan_. The first canto of the last was written in
+November, 1818, the second in January, 1819, the third and fourth towards
+the close of the same year. _Beppo_, its brilliant prelude, sparkles like
+a draught of champagne. This "Venetian story," or sketch, in which the
+author broke ground on his true satiric field--the satire of social
+life--and first adopted the measure avowedly suggested by _Whistlecraft_
+(Frere), was drafted in October, 1817, and appeared in May, 1818. It aims
+at comparatively little, but is perfectly successful in its aim, and
+unsurpassed for the incisiveness of its side strokes, and the courtly ease
+of a manner that never degenerates into mannerism. In _Mazeppa_ the poet
+reverts to his earlier style, and that of Scott; the description of the
+headlong ride hurries us along with a breathless expectancy that gives it
+a conspicuous place among his minor efforts. The passage about the howling
+of the wolves, and the fever faint of the victim, is as graphic as
+anything in Burns--
+
+ The skies spun like a mighty wheel,
+ I saw the trees like drunkards reel.
+
+In the May or June of 1818 Byron's little daughter, Allegra, had been sent
+from England, under the care of a Swiss nurse too young to undertake her
+management in such trying circumstances, and after four months of anxiety
+he placed her in charge of Mrs. Hoppner. In the course of this and the
+next year there are frequent allusions to the child, all, save one which
+records a mere affectation of indifference, full of affectionate
+solicitude. In June, 1819, he writes, "Her temper and her ways, Mr.
+Hoppner says, are like mine, as well as her features; she will make, in
+that case, a manageable young lady." Later he talks of her as "flourishing
+like a pomegranate blossom." In March, 1820, we have another reference.
+"Allegra is prettier, I think, but as obstinate as a mule, and as ravenous
+as a vulture; health good, to judge by the complexion, temper tolerable,
+but for vanity and pertinacity. She thinks herself handsome, and will do
+as she pleases." In May he refers to having received a letter from her
+mother, but gives no details. In the following year, with the approval of
+the Shelleys then at Pisa, he placed her for education in the convent of
+Cavalli Bagni in the Romagna. "I have," he writes to Hoppner, who had
+thought of having her boarded in Switzerland, "neither spared care,
+kindness, nor expense, since the child was sent to me. The people may say
+what they please. I must content myself with not deserving, in this
+instance, that they should speak ill. The place is a _country_ town, in a
+good air, and less liable to objections of every kind. It has always
+appeared to me that the moral defect in Italy does _not_ proceed from a
+_conventual_ education; because, to my certain knowledge, they come out of
+their convents innocent, even to ignorance of moral evil; but to the state
+of society into which they are directly plunged on coming out of it. It is
+like educating an infant on a mountain top, and then taking him to the
+sea, and throwing him into it, and desiring him to swim." Elsewhere he
+says, "I by no means intend to give a natural child an English education,
+because, with the disadvantages of her birth, her after settlement would
+be doubly difficult. Abroad, with a fair foreign education, and a portion
+of 5000_l_. or 6000_l_. (his will leaving her 5000_l_., on condition that
+she should not marry an Englishman, is here explained and justified), she
+might, and may, marry very respectably. In England such a dowry would be a
+pittance, while elsewhere it is a fortune. It is, besides, my wish that
+she should be a Roman Catholic, which I look upon as the best religion, as
+it is assuredly the oldest of the various branches of Christianity." It
+only remains to add that, when he heard that the child had fallen ill of
+fever in 1822, Byron was almost speechless with agitation, and, on the
+news of her death, which took place April 22nd, he seemed at first utterly
+prostrated. Next day he said, "Allegra is dead; she is more fortunate than
+we. It is God's will, let us mention it no more." Her remains rest beneath
+the elm-tree at Harrow which her father used to haunt in boyhood, with the
+date of birth and death, and the scripture--
+
+ I shall go to her, but she shall not return to me.
+
+The most interesting of the visits paid to Byron during the period of his
+life at Venice was that of Shelley, who, leaving his wife and children at
+Bagni di Lucca, came to see him in August, 1818. He arrived late, in the
+midst of a thunderstorm; and next day they sailed to the Lido, and rode
+together along the sands. The attitude of the two poets towards each other
+is curious; the comparatively shrewd man of the world often relied on the
+idealist for guidance and help in practical matters, admired his courage
+and independence, spoke of him invariably as the best of men, but never
+paid a sufficiently warm tribute in public to his work. Shelley, on the
+other hand, certainly the most modest of great poets, contemplates Byron
+in the fixed attitude of a literary worshipper.
+
+The introduction to _Julian and Maddalo_, directly suggested by this
+visit, under the slight veil of a change in the name, gives a summary of
+the view of his friend's character which he continued to entertain. "He is
+a person of the most consummate genius, and capable if he would direct his
+energies to such an end, of becoming the redeemer of his degraded country.
+But it is his weakness to be proud; he derives, from a comparison of his
+own extraordinary mind with the dwarfish intellects that surround him, an
+intense apprehension of the nothingness of human life. His passions and
+his powers are incomparably greater than those of other men; and instead
+of the latter having been employed in curbing the former, they have
+mutually lent each other strength;" but "in social life no human being can
+be more gentle, patient, and unassuming. He is cheerful, frank, and witty.
+His more serious conversation is a sort of intoxication; men are held by
+it as by a spell."
+
+Subsequently to this visit Byron lent the villa at Este to his friend, and
+during the autumn weeks of their residence there were written the lines
+among the Euganean hills, where, in the same strain of reverence, Shelley
+refers to the "tempest-cleaving swan of Albion," to the "music flung o'er
+a mighty thunder-fit," and to the sunlike soul destined to immortalize his
+ocean refuge,--
+
+ As the ghost of Homer clings
+ Round Seamander's wasting springs,
+ As divinest Shakespeare's might
+ Fills Avon and the world with light.
+
+"The sun," he says, at a later date, "has extinguished the glowworm;" and
+again, "I despair of rivalling Lord Byron, as well I may; and there is no
+other with whom it is worth contending."
+
+Shelley was, in the main, not only an exquisite but a trustworthy critic;
+and no man was more absolutely above being influenced by the fanfaronade
+of rank or the din of popularity. These criticisms are therefore not to be
+lightly set aside, nor are they unintelligible. Perhaps those admirers of
+the clearer and more consistent nature, who exalt him to the rank of a
+greater poet, are misled by the amiable love of one of the purest
+characters in the history of our literature. There is at least no
+difficulty in understanding why he should have been, as it were, concussed
+by Byron's greater massiveness and energy into a sense--easy to an
+impassioned devotee--of inferiority. Similarly, most of the estimates--
+many already reversed, others reversible--by the men of that age, of each
+other, can be explained. We can see how it was that Shelley overestimated
+both the character and the powers of Hunt; and Byron depreciated Keats,
+and was ultimately repelled by Wordsworth, and held out his hand to meet
+the manly grasp of Scott. The one enigma of their criticism is the respect
+that they joined in paying to the witty, genial, shallow, worldly, musical
+Tom Moore.
+
+This favourite of fortune and the minor muses, in the course of a short
+tour through the north of Italy in the autumn of 1819, found his noble
+friend on the 8th of October at La Mira, went with him on a sight-seeing
+expedition to Venice, and passed five or six days in his company. Of this
+visit he has recorded his impressions, some of which relate to his host's
+personal appearance, others to his habits and leading incidents of his
+life. Byron "had grown fatter, both in person and face, and the latter had
+suffered most by the change, having lost by the enlargement of the
+features some of that refined and spiritualized look that had in other
+times distinguished it, but although less romantic he appeared more
+humorous." They renewed their recollections of the old days and nights in
+London, and compared them with later experiences of Bores and Blues, in a
+manner which threatened to put to flight the historical and poetical
+associations naturally awakened by the City of the Sea. Byron had a rooted
+dislike to any approach to fine talk in the ordinary intercourse of life;
+and when his companion began to rhapsodize on the rosy hue of the Italian
+sunsets, he interrupted him with, "Come, d--n it, Tom, _don't_ be
+poetical." He insisted on Moore, who sighed after what he imagined would
+be the greater comforts of an hotel, taking up his quarters in his palace;
+and as they were groping their way through the somewhat dingy entrance,
+cried out, "Keep clear of the dog!" and a few paces farther, "Take care,
+or the monkey will fly at you!" an incident recalling the old vagaries of
+the menagerie at Newstead. The biographer's reminiscences mainly dwell on
+his lordship's changing moods and tempers and gymnastic exercises, his
+terror of interviewing strangers, his imperfect appreciation of art, his
+preference of fish to flesh, his almost parsimonious economy in small
+matters, mingled with allusions to his domestic calamities, and frequent
+expressions of a growing distaste to Venetian society. On leaving the
+city, Moore passed a second afternoon at La Mira, had a glimpse of
+Allegra, and the first intimation of the existence of the notorious
+Memoirs. "A short time after dinner Byron left the room, and returned
+carrying in his hand a white leather bag. 'Look here,' he said, holding it
+up; 'this would be worth something to Murray, though _you_, I dare say,
+would not give sixpence for it.' 'What is it?' I asked. 'My life and
+adventures,' he answered. 'It is not a thing,' he answered, 'that can be
+published during my lifetime, but you may have it if you like. There, do
+whatever you please with it.' In taking the bag, and thanking him most
+warmly, I added, 'This will make a nice legacy for my little Tom, who
+shall astonish the latter days of the nineteenth century with it.'"[2]
+Shortly after, Moore for the last time bade his friend farewell, taking
+with him from Madame Guiccioli, who did the honours of the house, an
+introduction to her brother, Count Gamba, at Rome. "Theresa Guiccioli,"
+says Castelar, "appears like a star on the stormy horizon of the poet's
+life." A young Romagnese, the daughter of a nobleman of Ravenna, of good
+descent but limited means, she had been educated in a convent, and married
+in her nineteenth year to a rich widower of sixty, in early life a friend
+of Alfieri, and noted as the patron of the National Theatre. This
+beautiful blonde, of pleasing manners, graceful presence, and a strong
+vein of sentiment, fostered by the reading of Chateaubriand, met Byron for
+the first time casually when she came in her bridal dress to one of the
+Albrizzi reunions; but she was only introduced to him early in the April
+of the following year, at the house of the Countess Benzoni. "Suddenly the
+young Italian found herself inspired with a passion of which till that
+moment her mind could not have formed the least idea; she had thought of
+love but as an amusement, and now became its slave." Byron, on the other
+hand, gave what remained of a heart, never alienated from her by any other
+mistress. Till the middle of the month they met every day; and when the
+husband took her back to Ravenna she despatched to her idol a series of
+impassioned letters, declaring her resolution to mould her life in
+accordance with his wishes. Towards the end of May she had prepared her
+relatives to receive Byron as a visitor. He started in answer to the
+summons, writing on his way the beautiful stanzas to the Po, beginning--
+
+ River that rollest by the ancient walls
+ Where dwells the lady of my love.
+
+ [Footnote 2: In December, 1820, Byron sent several more sheets of
+ memoranda from Ravenna, and in the following year suggested an
+ arrangement by which Murray paid over to Moore, who was then in
+ difficulties, 2000_l_. for the right of publishing the whole, under
+ the condition, among others, that Lady Byron should see them, and have
+ the right of reply to anything that might seem to her objectionable.
+ She on her part declined to have anything to do with them. When the
+ Memoirs were destroyed, Moore paid back the 2000_l_., but obtained
+ four thousand guineas for editing the _Life and Correspondence_.]
+
+Again passing through Ferrara, and visiting Bologna, he left the latter on
+the 8th, and on his arrival at his destination found the Countess
+dangerously ill; but his presence, and the attentions of the famous
+Venetian doctor, Aglietti, who was sent for by his advice, restored her.
+The Count seems to have been proud of his guest. "I can't make him out at
+all," Byron writes; "he visits me frequently, and takes me out (like
+Whittington the Lord Mayor) in a coach and six horses. The fact appears to
+be, that he is completely governed by her--and, for that matter, so am I."
+Later he speaks of having got his horses from Venice, and riding or
+driving daily in the scenery reproduced in the third canto of _Don
+Juan_:--
+
+ Sweet hour of twilight! in the solitude
+ Of the pine forest, and the silent shore
+ Which bounds Ravenna's immemorial wood.
+
+On Theresa's recovery, in dread of a possible separation he proposed to
+fly with her to America, to the Alps, to "some unsuspected isle in the far
+seas;" and she suggested the idea of feigning death, like Juliet, and
+rising from the tomb. Neither expedient was called for. When the Count
+went to Bologna, in August, with his wife, Lord Byron was allowed to
+follow; and--after consoling himself during an excursion which the married
+pair made to their estate, by hovering about her empty rooms and writing
+in her books--he established himself, on the Count's return to his
+headquarters, with her and Allegra at Bologna. Meanwhile, Byron had
+written _The Prophecy of Dante_, and in August the prose letter, _To the
+Editor of the British Review_, on the charge of bribery in _Don Juan_.
+Than this inimitable epistle no more laughter-compelling composition
+exists. About the same time, we hear of his leaving the theatre in a
+convulsion of tears, occasioned by the representation of Alfieri's
+_Mirra_.
+
+He left Bologna with the Countess on the 15th of September, when they
+visited the Euganean hills and Arqua, and wrote their names together in
+the Pilgrim's Book. On arriving at Venice, the physicians recommending
+Madame Guiccioli to country air, they settled, still by her husband's
+consent, for the autumn at La Mira, where Moore and others found them
+domesticated. At the beginning of November the poet was prostrated by an
+attack of tertian fever. In some of his hours of delirium he dictated to
+his careful nurses, Fletcher and the Countess, a number of verses, which
+she assures us were correct and sensible. He attributes his restoration to
+cold water and the absence of doctors; but, ere his complete recovery,
+Count Guiccioli had suddenly appeared on the scene, and run away with his
+own wife. The lovers had for a time not only to acquiesce in the
+separation, but to agree to cease their correspondence. In December, Byron
+in a fit of spleen had packed up his belongings, with a view to return to
+England. "He was," we are told, "ready dressed for the journey, his boxes
+on board the gondola, his gloves and cap on, and even his little cane in
+his hand, when my lord declares that if it should strike one--which it
+did--before everything was in order, he would not go that day. It is
+evident he had not the heart to go." Next day he heard that Madame
+Guiccioli was again seriously ill, received and accepted the renewed
+invitation which bound him to her and to the south. He left Venice for the
+last time almost by stealth, rushed along the familiar roads, and was
+welcomed at Ravenna.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+
+
+1820-1821.
+
+RAVENNA--DRAMAS--CAIN--VISION OF JUDGMENT.
+
+Byrons's life at Ravenna was during the first months comparatively calm;
+nevertheless, he mingled in society, took part in the Carnival, and was
+received at the parties of the Legate. "I may stay," he writes in January,
+1820, "a day--a week--a year--all my life." Meanwhile, he imported his
+movables from Venice, hired a suite of rooms in the Guiccioli palace,
+executed his marvellously close translation of Pulci's _Morgante
+Maggiore_, wrote his version of the story of _Francesca of Rimini_, and
+received visits from his old friend Bankes and from Sir Humphrey Davy. At
+this time he was accustomed to ride about armed to the teeth, apprehending
+a possible attack from assassins on the part of Count Guiccioli. In April
+his letters refer to the insurrectionary movements then beginning against
+the Holy Alliance. "We are on the verge of a row here. Last night they
+have over-written all the city walls with 'Up with the Republic!' and
+'Death to the Pope!' The police have been searching for the subscribers,
+but have caught none as yet. The other day they confiscated the whole
+translation of the fourth canto of _Childe Harold_, and have prosecuted
+the translator." In July a Papal decree of separation between the Countess
+and her husband was obtained, on condition of the latter paying from his
+large income a pittance to the lady of 200 _l_. a year, and her
+undertaking to live in her father's house--an engagement which was, first
+in the spirit, and subsequently in the letter, violated. For a time,
+however, she retired to a villa about fifteen miles from Ravenna, where
+she was visited by Byron at comparatively rare intervals. By the end of
+July he had finished _Marino Faliero_, and ere the close of the year the
+fifth canto of _Don Juan_. in September he says to Murray, "I am in a
+fierce humour, at not having Scott's _Monastery_. No more Keats,[1] I
+entreat. There is no bearing the drivelling idiotism of the manikin. I
+don't feel inclined to care further about _Don Juan_. What do you think a
+very pretty Italian lady said to me the other day, when I remarked that
+'it would live longer than _Childe Harold_'? 'Ah! but I would rather have
+the fame of _Childe Harold_ for three years than an immortality of _D.
+J._'" This is to-day the common female judgment; it is known to have been
+La Guiccioli's, as well as Mrs. Leigh's, and by their joint persuasion
+Byron was for a season induced to lay aside "that horrid, wearisome Don."
+About this time he wrote the memorable reply to the remarks on that poem
+in _Blackwood's Magazine_', where he enters on a defence of his life,
+attacks the Lakers, and champions Pope against the new school of poetry,
+lamenting that his own practice did not square with his precept; and
+adding, "We are all wrong, except Rogers, Crabbe, and Campbell."
+
+ [Footnote 1: In a note on a similar passage, bearing the date November
+ 12, 1821, he, however, confesses:--"My indignation at Mr. Keats'
+ depreciation of Pope has hardly permitted me to do justice to his own
+ genius, which malgre all the fantastic fopperies of his style was
+ undoubtedly of great promise. His fragment of Hyperion seems actually
+ inspired by the Titans, and is as sublime as AEschylus. He is a loss
+ to our literature."]
+
+In November he refers to reports of his letters being opened by the
+Austrian officials, and the unpleasant things the Huns, as he calls them,
+are likely to find therein. Early in the next month he tells Moore that
+the commandant of their troops, a brave officer, but obnoxious to the
+people, had been found lying at his door, with five slugs in him, and,
+bleeding inwardly, had died in the palace, where he had been brought to be
+nursed.
+
+This incident is versified in _Don Juan_, v. 33-39, with anatomical
+minuteness of detail. After trying in vain to wrench an answer out of
+death, the poet ends in his accustomed strain--
+
+ But it was all a mystery. Here we are,
+ And there we go:--but _where_? Five bits of lead--
+ Or three, or two, or one--send very far!
+
+Assassination has sometimes been the prelude to revolution, but it may be
+questioned if it has over promoted the cause of liberty. Most frequently
+it has served as a pretext for reaction, or a red signal. In this
+instance--as afterwards in 1848--overt acts of violence made the powers of
+despotism more alert, and conduced with the half-hearted action of their
+adversaries to the suppression of the rising of 1820-21. Byron's sympathy
+with the movement seems to have been stimulated by his new associations.
+Theresa's brother, Count Pietro, an enthusiastic young soldier, having
+returned from Rome and Naples, surmounting a prejudice not wholly
+unnatural, became attached to him, and they entered into a partnership in
+behalf of what--adopting a phrase often flaunted in opposite camps--they
+called constitutional principles. Finally the poet so committed himself to
+the party of insurrection that, though his nationality secured him from
+direct attack, his movements were necessarily affected by the fiasco. In
+July the Gambas were banished from the Romagna, Pietro being actually
+carried by force over the frontier; and, according to the articles of her
+separation, the Countess had to follow them to Florence. Byron lingered
+for some mouths, partly from a spirit of defiance, and partly from his
+affection towards a place where he had enlisted the regards of numerous
+beneficiaries. The Gambas were for some time bent on migrating to
+Switzerland; but the poet, after first acquiescing, subsequently conceived
+a violent repugnance to the idea, and early in August wrote to Shelley,
+earnestly requesting his presence, aid, and counsel. Shelley at once
+complied, and, entering into a correspondence with Madame Guiccioli,
+succeeded in inducing her relatives to abandon their transmontane plans,
+and agree to take up their headquarters at Pisa. This incident gave rise
+to a series of interesting letters, in which the younger poet gives a
+vivid and generous account of the surroundings and condition of his
+friend. On the 2nd of August he writes from Ravenna:--"I arrived last
+night at ten o'clock, and sat up talking with Lord B. till five this
+morning. He was delighted to see me. He has, in fact, completely recovered
+his health, and lives a life totally the reverse of that which he led at
+Venice.... Poor fellow! he is now quite well, and immersed in politics and
+literature. We talked a great deal of poetry and such matters last night,
+and, as usual, differed, I think, more than ever. He affects to patronize
+a system of criticism fit only for the production of mediocrity; and,
+although all his finer poems and passages have been produced in defiance
+of this system, yet I recognize the pernicious effects of it in the _Doge
+of Venice_." Again, on the 15th: "Lord B. is greatly improved in every
+respect--in genius, in temper, in moral views, in health, and happiness.
+His connexion with La Guiccioli has been an inestimable benefit to him. He
+lives in considerable splendour, but within his income, which is now about
+4000_l_. a year, 1000_l_. of which he devotes to purposes of charity.
+Switzerland is little fitted for him; the gossip and the cabals of those
+Anglicised coteries would torment him, as they did before. Ravenna is a
+miserable place. He would in every respect be better among the Tuscans. He
+has read to me one of the unpublished cantos of _Don Juan_. It sets him
+not only above, but far above, all the poets of the day. Every word has
+the stamp of immortality.... I have spoken to him of Hunt, but not with a
+direct view of demanding a contribution. I am sure, if I asked, it would
+not be refused; yet there is something in me that makes it impossible.
+Lord B. and I are excellent friends; and were I reduced to poverty, or
+were I a writer who had no claim to a higher position than I possess, I
+would freely ask him any favour. Such is not now the case." Later, after
+stating that Byron had decided upon Tuscany, he says, in reference to La
+Guiccioli, "At the conclusion of a letter, full of all the fine things she
+says she has heard of me, is this request, which I transcribe:--'Signore,
+la vostra bonta mi fa ardita di chiedervi un favore, me lo accordarete
+voi? _Non partite da Ravenna senza milord_.' Of course, being now by all
+the laws of knighthood captive to a lady's request, I shall only be at
+liberty on my parole until Lord Byron is settled at Pisa."
+
+Shelley took his leave, after a visit of ten days' duration, about the
+17th or 18th of April. In a letter, dated August 26, he mentions having
+secured for his lordship the Palazzo Lanfranchi, an old spacious building
+on the Lung' Arno, once the family residence of the destroyers of Ugolino,
+and still said to be haunted by their ghosts. Towards the close of
+October, he says they have been expecting him any day those six weeks.
+Byron, however, did not leave till the morning of the 29th. On his road,
+there occurred at Imola the accidental meeting with Lord Clare. Clare--who
+on this occasion merely crossed his friend's path on his way to Rome--at a
+later date came on purpose from Geneva before returning to England to
+visit the poet, who, then at Leghorn, recorded in a letter to Moore his
+sense of this proof of old affection undecayed. At Bologna--his next
+stage--he met Rogers by appointment, and the latter has preserved his
+memory of the event in well-known lines. Together they revisited Florence
+and its galleries, where they were distracted by the crowds of
+sight-seeing visitors. Byron must have reached Pisa not later than the 2nd
+of November (1821), for his first letter from there bears the date of the
+3rd.
+
+The later months of the poet's life at Ravenna were marked by intense
+literary activity. Over a great part of the year was spread the
+controversy with Bowles about Pope, i.e. between the extremes of Art
+against Nature, and Nature against Art. It was a controversy for the most
+part free from personal animus, and on Byron's part the genuine expression
+of a reaction against a reaction. To this year belong the greater number
+of the poet's Historical Dramas. What was said of these, at the time by
+Jeffrey, Heber, and others, was said with justice; it is seldom that the
+criticism of our day finds so little to reverse in that of sixty years
+ago.
+
+The author, having shown himself capable of being pathetic, sarcastic,
+sentimental, comical, and sublime, we would be tempted to think that he
+had written these plays to show, what no one before suspected, that he
+could also be dull, were it not for his own exorbitant estimation of them.
+Lord Byron had few of the powers of a great dramatist; he had little
+architectural imagination, or capacity to conceive and build up a whole.
+His works are mainly masses of fine, splendid, or humorous writing, heaped
+together; the parts are seldom forged into one, or connected by any
+indissoluble link. His so-called Dramas are only poems divided into
+chapters. Further, he had little of what Mr. Ruskin calls penetrative
+imagination. So it has been plausibly said that he made his men after his
+own image, his women after his own heart. The former are, indeed, rather
+types of what he wished to be than what he was. They are better, and
+worse, than himself. They have stronger wills, more definite purposes, but
+less genial and less versatile natures. But it remains true, that when he
+tried to represent a character totally different from himself, the result
+is either unreal or uninteresting. _Marino Faliero_, begun April, finished
+July, 1820, and prefixed by a humorous dedication to Goethe--which was,
+however, suppressed--was brought on the stage of Drury Lane Theatre early
+in 1821, badly mangled, appointed, and acted--and damned.
+
+Byron seems to have been sincere in saying he did not intend any of his
+plays to be represented. We are more inclined to accuse him of
+self-deception when he asserts that he did not mean them to be popular;
+but he took sure means to prevent them from being so. _Marino Faliero_, in
+particular, was pronounced by Dr. John Watkins--old Grobius himself--"to
+be the dullest of dull plays;" and even the warmest admirers of the poet
+had to confess that the style was cumbrous. The story may be true, but it
+is none the less unnatural. The characters are comparatively commonplace,
+the women especially being mere shadows; the motion is slow; and the
+inevitable passages of fine writing are, as the extolled soliloquy of
+Lioni, rather rhetorical than imaginative. The speeches of the Doge are
+solemn, but prolix, if not ostentatious, and--perhaps the vital
+defect--his cause fails to enlist our sympathies. Artistically, this play
+was Byron's most elaborate attempt to revive the unities and other
+restrictions of the severe style, which, when he wrote, had been
+"vanquished in literature." "I am persuaded," he writes in the preface,
+"that a great tragedy is not to be produced by following the old
+dramatists, who are full of faults, but by producing regular dramas like
+the Greeks." He forgets that the statement in the mouth of a Greek
+dramatist that his play was not intended for the stage, would have been a
+confession of failure; and that Aristotle had admitted that even the Deity
+could not make the Past present. The ethical motives of Faliero are,
+first, the cry for vengeance--the feeling of affronted or unsatiated
+pride,--that runs through so much of the author's writing, and second, the
+enthusiasm for public ends, which was beginning to possess him. The
+following lines have been pointed out as embodying some of Byron's spirit
+of protest against the more selfish "greasy domesticity" of the Georgian
+era:--
+
+ I. BER. Such ties are not
+ For those who are called to the high destinies
+ Which purify corrupted commonwealths:
+ We must forget all feelings save the one,
+ We must resign all passions save our purpose,
+ We must behold no object save our country,
+ And only look on death as beautiful
+ So that the sacrifice ascend to heaven,
+ And draw down freedom on her evermore.
+
+ CAL. But if we fail--?
+
+ I. BER. They never fail who die
+ In a great cause: the block may soak their gore;
+ Their heads may sodden in the sun; their limbs
+ Be strung to city gates and castle walls,
+ But still their spirit walks abroad.
+
+--a passage which, after his wont, he spoils by platitudes about the
+precisian Brutus, who certainly did not give Rome liberty.
+
+Byron's other Venetian Drama, the _Two Foscari_, composed at Ravenna,
+between the 11th of June and the 10th of July, 1821, and published in the
+following December, is another record of the same failure and the same
+mortification, due to the same causes. In this play, as Jeffrey points
+out, the preservation of the unities had a still more disastrous effect.
+The author's determination to avoid rant did not hinder his frequently
+adopting an inflated style; while professing to follow the ancient rules,
+he forgets the warning of Horace so far as to permit the groans of the
+tortured Foscari to be heard on the stage. The declamations of Marina
+produce no effect on the action, and the vindictiveness of Loridano,
+though effectively pointed in the closing words, "He has paid me," is not
+rendered interesting, either by a well established injury, or by any trace
+of Iago's subtle genius.
+
+In the same volume appeared _Sardanapalus_, written in the previous May,
+and dedicated to Goethe. In this play, which marks the author's last
+reversion to the East, we are more arrested by the majesty of the theme--
+
+ Thirteen hundred years
+ Of empire ending like a shepherd's tale,
+
+by the grandeur of some of the passages, and by the development of the
+chief character, made more vivid by its being distinctly autobiographical.
+Sardanapalus himself is Harold, raised "high on a throne," and rousing
+himself at the close from a life of effeminate lethargy. Myrrha has been
+often identified with La Guiccioli, and the hero's relation to his Queen
+Zarina compared with that of the poet to his wife; but in his portrait of
+the former the author's defective capacity to represent national character
+is manifest: Myrrha is only another Gulnare, Medora, or Zuleika. In the
+domestic play of _Werner_--completed at Pisa in January, 1822, and
+published in November, there is no merit either of plan or execution; for
+the plot is taken, with little change, from "The German's Tale," written
+by Harriet Lee, and the treatment is throughout prosaic. Byron was never a
+master of blank verse; but _Werner_, his solo success on the modern
+British stage, is written in a style fairly parodied by Campbell, when he
+cut part of the author's preface into lines, and pronounced them as good
+as any in the play.
+
+The _Deformed Transformed_, another adaptation, suggested by a forgotten
+novel called _The Three Brothers_, with reminiscences of _Faust_, and
+possibly of Scott's _Black Dwarf_, was begun at Pisa in 1821, but not
+published till January, 1824. This fragment owes its interest to the
+bitter infusion of personal feeling in the first scene, and its occasional
+charm to the march of some of the lines, especially those describing the
+Bourbon's advance on Rome; but the effect of the magical element is killed
+by previous parallels, while the story is chaotic and absurd. The
+_Deformed Transformed_ bears somewhat the same relation to _Manfred as
+Heaven and Earth_--an occasionally graphic dream of the world before the
+Deluge, written October, 1821, and issued about the same time as Moore's
+_Loves of the Angels_, on a similar theme--does to _Cain_. The last named,
+begun in July, and finished at Ravenna in September, is the author's
+highest contribution to the metaphysical poetry of the century. In _Cain_
+Byron grapples with the perplexities of a belief which he never either
+accepted or rejected, and with the yet deeper problems of life and death,
+of good and ill. In dealing with these his position is not that of one
+justifying the ways of God to man--though he somewhat disingenuously
+appeals to Milton in his defence--nor that of the definite antagonism of
+_Queen Mab_. The distinction in this respect between Byron and Shelley
+cannot be over-emphasized. The latter had a firm faith other than that
+commonly called Christian. The former was, in the proper sense of the
+word, a sceptic, beset with doubts, and seeking for a solution which he
+never found, shifting in his expression of them with every change of a
+fickle and inconsistent temperament. The atmosphere of _Cain_ is almost
+wholly negative; for under the guise of a drama, which is mainly a
+dialogue between two halves of his mind, the author appears to sweep aside
+with something approaching to disdain the answers of a blindly accepted
+tradition, or of a superficial optimism, e.g.--
+
+ CAIN. Then my father's God did well
+ When he prohibited the fatal tree.
+
+ LUCIFER. But had done better in not planting it.
+
+Again, a kid, after suffering agonies from the sting of a reptile, is
+restored by antidotes--
+
+ Behold, my son! said Adam, how from evil
+ Springs good!
+
+ LUCIFER. What didst thou answer?
+
+ CAIN. Nothing; for
+ He is my father; but I thought, that 'twere
+ A better portion for the animal
+ Never to have been stung at all.
+
+This rebellious nature naturally yields to the arguments of Lucifer, a
+spirit in which much of the grandeur of Milton's Satan is added to the
+subtlety of Mephistopheles. In the first scene Cain is introduced,
+rebelling against toils imposed on him by an offence committed before he
+was born,--"I sought not to be born"--the answer, that toil is a good,
+being precluded by its authoritative representation as a punishment; in
+which mood he is confirmed by the entrance and reasonings of the Tempter,
+who identifies the Deity with Seva the Destroyer, hints at the dreadful
+visitation of the yet untasted death; when Adah, entering, takes him at
+first for an angel, and then recognizes him as a fiend. Her invocation to
+Eve, and comparison of the "heedless, harmless, wantonness of bliss" in
+Eden, to the later lot of those girt about with demons from whose
+fascination they cannot fly, is one of the most striking in the drama; as
+is the line put into the mouth of the poet's most beautiful female
+character, to show that God cannot be alone,--
+
+ What else can joy be, but diffusing joy?
+
+Her subsequent contrast of Lucifer with the other angels is more after the
+style of Shelley than anything else in Byron--
+
+ As the silent sunny moon,
+ All light, they look upon us. But thou seemst
+ Like an ethereal night, where long white clouds
+ Streak the deep purple, and unnumber'd stars
+ Spangle the wonderful mysterious vault
+ With things that look as if they would be suns--
+ So beautiful, unnumber'd and endearing;
+ Not dazzling, and yet drawing us to them,
+ They fill my eyes with tears, and so dost thou.
+
+The flight with Lucifer, in the second act, in the abyss of space and
+through the Hades of "uncreated night," with the vision of long-wrecked
+worlds, and the interminable gloomy realms
+
+ Of swimming shadows and enormous shapes,
+
+--suggested, as the author tells us, by the reading of Cuvier--leaves us
+with impressions of grandeur and desolation which no other passages of
+English poetry can convey. Lord Byron has elsewhere exhibited more
+versatility of fancy and richness of illustration, but nowhere else has he
+so nearly "struck the stars." From constellation to constellation the pair
+speed on, cleaving the blue with mighty wings, but finding in all a blank,
+like that in Richter's wonderful dream. The result on the mind of Cain is
+summed in the lines on the fatal tree,--
+
+ It was a lying tree--for we _know_ nothing;
+ At least, it _promised knowledge_ at the price
+ Of death--but _knowledge_ still; but, what _knows_ man?
+
+A more modern poet answers, after beating at the same iron gates, "Behold,
+we know not anything." The most beautiful remaining passage is Cain's
+reply to the question--what is more beautiful to him than all that he has
+seen in the "unimaginable ether"?--
+
+ My sister Adah.--All the stars of heaven,
+ The deep blue noon of night, lit by an orb
+ Which looks a spirit, or a spirit's world--
+ The hues of twilight--the sun's gorgeous coming--
+ His setting indescribable, which fills
+ My eyes with pleasant tears as I behold
+ Him sink, and feel my heart flow softly with him
+ Along that western paradise of clouds
+ The forest shade--the green bough--the bird's voice--
+ The vesper bird's, which seems to sing of love,
+ And mingles with the song of cherubim,
+ As the day closes over Eden's walls:--
+ All these are nothing, to my eyes and heart,
+ Like Adah's face.
+
+Lucifer's speech, at the close of the act is perhaps too Miltonic to be
+absolutely original. Returning to earth, we have a pastoral, of which Sir
+Egerton Brydges justly and sufficiently remarks, "The censorious may say
+what they will, but there are speeches in the mouth of Cain and Adah,
+especially regarding their child, which nothing in English poetry but the
+'wood-notes wild' of Shakespeare, ever equalled." Her cry, as Cain seems
+to threaten the infant, followed by the picture of his bloom and joy, is a
+touch of perfect pathos. Then comes the interview with the pious Abel, who
+is amazed at the lurid light in the eyes of his brother, with the spheres
+"singing in thunder round" him--the two sacrifices, the murder, the shriek
+of Zillah--
+
+ Father! Eve!
+ Adah! Come hither! Death is in the world;
+
+Cain's rallying from stupor--
+
+ I am awake at last--a dreary dream
+ Had madden'd me,--but he shall never wake:
+
+the curse of Eve; and the close--[Greek: meizon ae kata dakrua]
+
+ CAIN. Leave me.
+
+ ADAH. Why all have left thee.
+
+ CAIN. And wherefore lingerest thou? Dost thou not fear?
+
+ ADAH. I fear
+ Nothing, except to leave thee.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ CAIN. Eastward from Eden will we take our way.
+
+ ADAH. Leave! thou shalt be my guide; and may our God
+ Be thine! Now let us carry forth our children.
+
+ CAIN. And _he_ who lieth there was childless. I
+ Have dried the fountain of a gentle race.
+ O Abel!
+
+ ADAH. Peace be with him.
+
+ CAIN. But with _me_!
+
+_Cain_, between which and the _Cenci_ lies the award of the greatest
+single performance in dramatic shape of our century, raised a storm. It
+was published, with _Sardanapalus_ and _The Two Foscari_ in December,
+1821, and the critics soon gave evidence of the truth of Elze's remark--
+"In England freedom of action is cramped by the want of freedom of
+thought. The converse is the case with us Germans; freedom of thought is
+restricted by the want of freedom in action. To us this scepticism
+presents nothing in the least fearful." But with us it appeared as if a
+literary Guy Fawkes had been detected in the act of blowing up half the
+cathedrals and all the chapels of the country. The rage of insular
+orthodoxy was in proportion to its impotence. Every scribbler with a
+cassock denounced the book and its author, though few attempted to answer
+him. The hubbub was such that Byron wrote to Murray, authorizing him to
+disclaim all responsibility, and offering to refund the payment he had
+received. "Say that both you and Mr. Gilford remonstrated. I will come to
+England to stand trial. 'Me, me, adsum qui feci,'"--and much to the same
+effect. The book was pirated; and on the publisher's application to have
+an injunction, Lord Eldon refused to grant it. The majority of the minor
+reviewers became hysterical, and Dr. Watkins, amid much almost
+inarticulate raving, said that Sir Walter Scott, who had gratefully
+accepted the dedication, would go down to posterity with the brand of
+_Cain_ upon his brow. Several even of the higher critics took fright.
+Jeffrey, while protesting his appreciation of the literary merits of the
+work, lamented its tendency to unsettle faith. Mr. Campbell talked of its
+"frightful audacity." Bishop Heber wrote at great length to prove that its
+spirit was more dangerous than that of _Paradise Lost_--and succeeded. The
+_Quarterly_ began to cool towards the author. Moore wrote to him, that
+Cain was "wonderful, terrible, never to be forgotten," but "dreaded and
+deprecated" the influence of Shelley. Byron showed the letter to Shelley,
+who wrote to a common friend to assure Mr. Moore that he had not the
+smallest influence over his lordship in matters of religion, and only
+wished he had, as he would "employ it to eradicate from his great mind the
+delusions of Christianity, which seem perpetually to recur, and to lie in
+ambush for the hours of sickness and distress." Shelley elsewhere writes:
+"What think you of Lord B.'s last volume? In my opinion it contains finer
+poetry than has appeared in England since _Paradise Lost_. Cain is
+apocalyptic; it is a revelation not before communicated to man." In the
+same strain, Scott says of the author of the "grand and tremendous drama:"
+"He has certainly matched Milton on his own ground." The worst effect of
+those attacks appears in the shifts to which Byron resorted to explain
+himself,--to be imputed, however, not to cowardice, but to his wavering
+habit of mind. Great writers in our country have frequently stirred
+difficult questions in religion and life, and then seemed to be half
+scared, like Rouget de Lisle, by the reverberation of their own voices.
+Shelley almost alone was always ready to declare, "I meant what I said,
+and stand to it."
+
+Byron having, with or without design, arraigned some of the Thirty-Nine
+Articles of his countrymen, proceeded in the following month (October
+1821) to commit an outrage, yet more keenly resented, on the memory of
+their sainted king, the pattern of private virtue and public vice, George
+III. The perpetration of this occurred in the course of the last of his
+numerous literary duels, of which it was the close. That Mr. Southey was a
+well-meaning and independent man of letters, there can be no doubt. It
+does not require the conclusive testimony of the esteem of Savage Landor
+to compel our respect for the author of the _Life of Nelson_, and the
+open-handed friend of Coleridge; nor is it any disparagement that, with
+the last-named and with Wordsworth, he in middle life changed his
+political and other opinions. But in his dealings with Lord Byron, Southey
+had "eaten of the insane root." He attacked a man of incomparably superior
+powers, for whom his utter want of humour--save in its comparatively
+childish forms--made him a ludicrously unequal match, and paid the penalty
+in being gibbeted in satires that will endure with the language. The
+strife, which seems to have begun on Byron's leaving England, rose to its
+height when his lordship, in the humorous observations and serious defence
+of his character against "the Remarks" in Blackwood, 1819 (August),
+accused the Laureate of apostasy, treason, and slander.
+
+In 1821, when the latter published his _Vision of Judgment_--the most
+quaintly preposterous panegyric ever penned--he prefixed to it a long
+explanatory note, in the course of which he characterizes _Don Juan_ as a
+"monstrous combination of horror and mockery, lewdness and impiety,"
+regrets that it has not been brought under the lash of the law, salutes
+the writer as chief of the Satanic school, inspired by the spirits of
+Moloch and Belial, and refers to the remorse that will overtake him on his
+death-bed. To which Byron, _inter alia_: "Mr. Southey, with a cowardly
+ferocity, exults over the anticipated death-bed repentance of the objects
+of his dislike, and indulges himself in a pleasant 'Vision of Judgment,'
+in prose, as well as verse, full of impious impudence. What Mr. Southey's
+sensations or ours may be in the awful moment of leaving this state of
+existence, neither he nor we can pretend to decide. In common, I presume,
+with most men of any reflection, _I_ have not waited for a death-bed to
+repent of many of my actions, notwithstanding the 'diabolical pride' which
+this pitiful renegade in his rancour would impute to those who scorn him."
+This dignified, though trenchant, rejoinder would have been unanswerable;
+but the writer goes on to charge the Laureate with spreading calumnies. To
+this charge Southey, in January, 1822, replies with "a direct and positive
+denial," and then proceeds to talk at large of the "whip and branding
+iron," "slaves of sensuality," "stones from slings," "Goliahs," "public
+panders," and what not, in the manner of the brave days of old.
+
+In February Byron, having seen this assault in the _Courier_, writes off
+in needless heat, "I have got Southey's pretended reply; what remains to
+be done is to call him out,"--and despatches a cartel of mortal defiance.
+Mr. Douglas Kinnaird, through whom this was sent, judiciously suppressed
+it, and the author's thirst for literary blood was destined to remain
+unquenched. Meanwhile he had written his own _Vision of Judgment_. This
+extraordinary work, having been refused by both Murray and Longman,
+appeared in 1822 in the pages of the _Liberal_. It passed the bounds of
+British endurance; and the publisher, Mr. John Hunt, was prosecuted and
+fined for the publication.
+
+Readers of our day will generally admit that the "gouty hexameters" of the
+original poem, which celebrates the apotheosis of King George in heaven,
+are much more blasphemous than the _ottava rima_ of the travesty, which
+professes to narrate the difficulties of his getting there. Byron's
+_Vision of Judgment_ is as unmistakably the first of parodies as the
+_Iliad_ is the first of epics, or the _Pilgrim's Progress_ the first of
+allegories. In execution it is almost perfect. _Don Juan_ is in scope and
+magnitude a far wider work; but no considerable series of stanzas in _Don
+Juan_ are so free from serious artistic flaw. From first to last, every
+epithet hits the white; every line that does not convulse with laughter
+stings or lashes. It rises to greatness by the fact that, underneath all
+its lambent buffoonery, it is aflame with righteous wrath. Nowhere in such
+space, save in some of the prose of Swift, is there in English so much
+scathing satire.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+
+
+1821-1823.
+
+PISA--GENOA--DON JUAN.
+
+Byron, having arrived at Pisa with his troop of carriages, horses, dogs,
+fowls, servants, and a monkey, settled himself quietly in the Palazzo
+Lanfranchi for ten months, interrupted only by a sojourn of six weeks in
+the neighbourhood of Leghorn. His life in the old feudal building followed
+in the main the tenour of his life at Ravenna. He rose late, received
+visitors in the afternoons, played billiards, rode or practised with his
+pistols, in concert with Shelley, whom he refers to at this time as "the
+most companionable man under thirty" he had ever met. Both poets were good
+shots, but Byron the safest; for, though his hand often shook, he made
+allowance for the vibration, and never missed his mark. On one occasion he
+set up a slender cane, and at twenty paces divided it with his bullet. The
+early part of the evening he gave to a frugal meal and the society of La
+Guiccioli--now apparently, in defiance of the statute of limitations,
+established under the same roof--and then sat late over his verses. He was
+disposed to be more sociable than at Venice or Ravenna, and occasionally
+entertained strangers; but his intimate acquaintanceship was confined to
+Captain Williams and his wife, and Shelley's cousin, Captain Medwin. The
+latter used frequently to dine and sit with his host till the morning,
+collecting materials for the _Conversations_ which he afterwards gave to
+the world. The value of these reminiscences is impaired by the fact of
+their recording, as serious revelations, the absurd confidences in which
+the poet's humour for mystification was wont to indulge. Another of the
+group, an Irishman, called Taafe, is made, in his Lordship's
+correspondence of the period, to cut a somewhat comical figure. The
+master-passion of this worthy and genial fellow was to get a publisher for
+a fair commentary on Dante, to which he had firmly linked a very bad
+translation, and for about six months Byron pesters Murray with constant
+appeals to satisfy him; e.g. November l6, "He must be gratified, though
+the reviewers will make him suffer more tortures than there are in his
+original." March 6, "He will die if he is not published; he will be damned
+if he is; but that he don't mind." March 8, "I make it a point that he
+shall be in print; it will make the man so exuberantly happy. He is such a
+good-natured Christian that we must give him a shove through the press.
+Besides, he has had another fall from his horse into a ditch." Taafe,
+whose horsemanship was on a par with his poetry, can hardly have been
+consulted as to the form assumed by these apparently fruitless
+recommendations, so characteristic of the writer's frequent kindliness and
+constant love of mischief. About this time Byron received a letter from
+Mr. Shepherd, a gentleman in Somersetshire, referring to the death of his
+wife, among whose papers he had found the record of a touching, because
+evidently heart-felt, prayer for the poet's reformation, conversion, and
+restored peace of mind. To this letter he at once returned an answer.
+marked by much of the fine feeling of his best moods. Pisa, December 8:
+"Sir, I have received your letter. I need not say that the extract which
+it contains has affected me, because it would imply a want of all feeling
+to have read it with indifference.... Your brief and simple picture of the
+excellent person, whom I trust you will again meet, cannot be contemplated
+without the admiration due to her virtues and her pure and unpretending
+piety. I do not know that I ever met with anything so unostentatiously
+beautiful. Indisputably, the firm believers in the Gospel have a great
+advantage over all others--for this simple reason, that if true they will
+have their reward hereafter; and if there be no hereafter, they can but be
+with the infidel in his eternal sleep.... But a man's creed does not
+depend upon _himself_: who can say, I _will_ believe this, that, or the
+other? and least of all that which he least can comprehend.... I can
+assure you that not all the fame which ever cheated humanity into higher
+notions of its own importance, would ever weigh in my mind against the
+pure and pious interest which a virtuous being may be pleased to take in
+my behalf. In this point of view I would not exchange the prayer of the
+deceased in my behalf for the united glory of Homer, Caesar, and
+Napoleon."
+
+The letter to Lady Byron, which he afterwards showed to Lady Blessington,
+must have borne about the same date; and we have a further indication of
+his thoughts reverting homeward in an urgent request to Murray--written on
+December 10th, Ada's sixth birthday--to send his daughter's miniature.
+After its arrival nothing gave him greater pleasure than to be told of its
+strong likeness to himself. In the course of the same month an event
+occurred which strangely illustrates the manners of the place, and the
+character of the two poets. An unfortunate fanatic having taken it into
+his head to steal the wafer-box out of a church at Lucca, and being
+detected, was, in accordance with the ecclesiastical law till lately
+maintained against sacrilege, condemned to be burnt alive. Shelley, who
+believed that the sentence would really be carried into effect, proposed
+to Byron that they should gallop off together, and by aid of their
+servants rescue by force the intended victim. Byron, however, preferred in
+the first place, to rely on diplomacy; some vigorous letters passed;
+ultimately a representation, convoyed by Taafe to the English Ambassador,
+led to a commutation of the sentence, and the man was sent to the galleys.
+
+The January of 1822 was marked by the addition to the small circle of
+Captain E.J. Trelawny, the famous rover and bold free-lance (long sole
+survivor of the remarkable group), who accompanied Lord Byron to Greece,
+and has recorded a variety of incidents of the last months of his life.
+Trelawny, who appreciated Shelley with an intensity that is often apt to
+be exclusive, saw, or has reported, for the most part the weaker side of
+Byron. We are constrained to accept as correct the conjecture that his
+judgment was biassed by their rivalry in physical prowess, and the
+political differences which afterwards developed between them. Letters to
+his old correspondents--to Scott about the _Waverleys_, to Murray about
+the Dramas, and the _Vision of Judgment_, and _Cain_--make up almost the
+sole record of the poet's pursuits during the five following months. In
+February 6th he sent, through Mr. Kinnaird, the challenge to Southey, of
+the suppression of which he was not aware till May 17. The same letter
+contains a sheaf of the random cynicisms, as--"Cash is virtue," "Money is
+power; and when Socrates said he knew nothing, he meant he had not a
+drachma"--by which he sharpened the shafts of his assailants. A little
+later, on occasion of the death of Lady Noel, he expresses himself with
+natural bitterness on hearing that she had in her will recorded a wish
+against his daughter Ada seeing his portrait. In March he sat, along with
+La Guiccioli, to the sculptor Bartolini. On the 24th, when the company
+were on one of their riding excursions outside the town, a half-drunken
+dragoon on horseback broke through them, and by accident or design knocked
+Shelley from his seat. Byron, pursuing him along the Lung' Arno, called
+for his name, and, taking him for an officer, flung his glove. The sound
+of the fray brought the servants of the Lanfranchi to the door; and one of
+them, it was presumed--though in the scuffle everything remained
+uncertain--seriously wounded the dragoon in the side. An investigation
+ensued, as the result of which the Gambas were ultimately exiled from
+Tuscany, and the party of friends was practically broken up. Shelley and
+his wife, with the Williamses and Trelawny, soon after settled at the
+Villa Magni at Lerici in the Gulf of Spezia. Byron, with the Countess and
+her brother, established themselves in the Villa Rossa at Monte Nero, a
+suburb of Leghorn, from which port at this date the remains of Allegra
+were conveyed to England.
+
+Among the incidents of this residence were, the homage paid to the poet by
+a party of Americans; the painting of his portrait (and that of La
+Guiccioli) by the artist West, who has left a pleasing account of his
+visits; Byron's letter making inquiry about the country of Bolivar (where
+it was his fancy to settle); and another of those disturbances by which he
+seemed destined to be harassed. One of his servants--among whom were
+unruly spirits, apparently selected with a kind of _Corsair_ bravado,--had
+made an assault on Count Pietro, wounding him in the face. This outburst,
+though followed by tears and penitence, confirmed the impression of the
+Tuscan police that the whole company were dangerous, and made the
+Government press for their departure. In the midst of the uproar, there
+suddenly appeared at the villa Mr. Leigh Hunt, with his wife and six
+children. They had taken passage to Genoa, where they were received by
+Trelawny, in command of the "Bolivar"--a yacht constructed in that port
+for Lord Byron, simultaneously with the "Don Juan" for Shelley. The
+latter, on hearing of the arrival of his friends, came to meet them at
+Leghorn, and went with them to Pisa. Early in July they were all
+established on the Lung' Arno, having assigned to them the ground floor of
+the palazzo.
+
+We have now to deal briefly--amid conflicting asseverations it is hard to
+deal fairly--with the last of the vexatiously controverted episodes which
+need perplex our narrative. Byron, in wishing Moore from Ravenna a merry
+Christmas for 1820, proposes that they shall embark together in a
+newspaper, "with some improvement on the plan of the present scoundrels,"
+"to give the age some new lights on policy, poesy, biography, criticism,
+morality, theology," &c. Moore absolutely refusing to entertain the idea,
+Hunt's name was brought forward in connexion with it, during tho visit of
+Shelley. Shortly after the return of the latter to Pisa, he writes (August
+26) to Hunt, stating that Byron was anxious to start a periodical work, to
+be conducted in Italy, and had proposed that they should both go shares in
+the concern, on which follow some suggestions of difficulties about money.
+Nevertheless, in August, 1821, he presses Hunt to come. Moore, on the
+other hand, strongly remonstrates against the project. "I heard some days
+ago that Leigh Hunt was on his way to you with all his family; and the
+idea seems to be that you and he and Shelley are to conspire together in
+the _Examiner_. I deprecate such a plan with all my might. Partnerships in
+fame, like those in trade, make the strongest party answer for the rest. I
+tremble even for you with such a bankrupt Co.! You must stand alone."
+Shelley--who had, in the meantime, given his bond to Byron for an advance
+of 200_l_. towards the expenses of his friends, besides assisting them
+himself to the utmost of his power--began, shortly before their arrival,
+to express grave doubts as to the success of the alliance. His last
+published letter--written July 5th, 1822--after they had settled at Pisa,
+is full of forebodings. On the 8th he set sail in the "Don Juan"--
+
+ That fatal and perfidious bark,
+ Built in th'eclipse, and rigg'd with curses dark,
+
+and was overtaken by the storm in which he perished. Three days after,
+Trelawny rode to Pisa, and told Byron of his fears, when the poet's lips
+quivered, and his voice faltered. On the 22nd of July the bodies of
+Shelley, Williams, and Vivian, were cast ashore. On the 16th August, Hunt,
+Byron, and Trelawny were present at the terribly weird cremation, which
+they have all described. At a later date, the two former were seized with
+a fit of delirium which is one of the phases of the tension of grief.
+Byron's references to the event are expressions less of the loss which he
+indubitably felt, than of his indignation at the "world's wrong." "Thus,"
+he writes, "there is another man gone, about whom the world was
+ill-naturedly and ignorantly and brutally mistaken. It will, perhaps, do
+him justice now, when he can be no better for it." Towards the end of the
+same letter the spirit of his dead friend seems to inspire the sentence
+--"With these things and these fellows it is necessary, in the present
+clash of philosophy and tyranny, to throw away the scabbard. I know it is
+against fearful odds, but the battle must be fought."
+
+Meanwhile, shortly after the new settlement at the Lanfranchi, the
+preparations for issuing the _Liberal_, edited by Leigh Hunt in Italy, and
+published by John Hunt in London, progressed. The first number, which
+appeared in September, was introduced, after a few words of preface, by
+the _Vision of Judgment_, with the signature Quevedo Redivivus, and
+adorned by Shelley's translation of the "May-Day Night," in _Faust_. It
+contained besides, the _Letter to the Editor of my Grandmother's Review_,
+an indifferent Florentine story, a German apologue, and a gossiping
+account of Pisa, presumably by Hunt. Three others followed, containing
+Byron's _Heaven and Earth_, his translation of the _Morgante Maggiore_,
+and _The Blues_--a very slight, if not silly, satire on literary ladies;
+some of Shelley's posthumous minor poems, among them "I arise from dreams
+of thee," and a few of Hazlitt's essays, including, however, none of his
+best. Leigh Hunt himself wrote most of the rest, one of his contributions
+being a palpable imitation of _Don Juan_, entitled the _Book of
+Beginnings_, but he confesses that owing to his weak health and low
+spirits at the time, none of these did justice to his ability; and the
+general manner of the magazine being insufficiently vigorous to carry off
+the frequent eccentricity of its matter, the prejudices against it
+prevailed, and the enterprise came to an end. Partners in failing concerns
+are apt to dispute; in this instance the unpleasantness which arose at the
+time rankled in the mind of the survivor, and gave rise to his singularly
+tasteless and injudicious book--a performance which can be only in part
+condoned by the fact of Hunt's afterwards expressing regret, and
+practically withdrawing it. He represents himself throughout as a
+much-injured man, lured to Italy by misrepresentations, that he might give
+the aid of his journalistic experience and undeniable talents to the
+advancement of a mercenary enterprise, and that when it failed he was
+despised, insulted, and rejected. Byron, on the other hand, declares, "The
+Hunts pressed me to engage in this work, and in an evil hour I consented;"
+and his subsequent action in the matter, if not always gentle never
+unjust, goes to verify his statements in the letters of the period. "I am
+afraid," he writes from Genoa, Oct. 9, 1822, "the journal is a bad
+business. I have done all I can for Leigh Hunt since he came here; but it
+is almost useless. His wife is ill, his six children not very tractable,
+and in the affairs of this world he himself is a child." Later he says to
+Murray, "You and your friends, by your injudicious rudeness, cement a
+connexion which you strove to prevent, and which, had the Hunts prospered,
+would not in all probability have continued. As it is ... I can't leave
+them among the breakers." On February 20th we have, his last word on the
+subject, to the same effect.
+
+In the following sentences, Moore seems to give a fair statement of the
+motives which led to the establishment of the unfortunate journal--"The
+chief inducements on the part of Lord Byron to this unworthy alliance
+were, in the first place, a wish to second the kind views of his friend
+Shelley in inviting Mr. Hunt to Italy; and in the next, a desire to avail
+himself of the aid of one so experienced as an editor in the favourite
+object he has so long contemplated of a periodical work in which all the
+offspring of his genius might be received as they sprung to light." For
+the accomplishment of this purpose Mr. Leigh Hunt was a singularly
+ill-chosen associate. A man of Radical opinions on all matters, not only
+of religion but of society--opinions which he acquired and held easily but
+firmly--could never recognize the propriety of the claim to deference
+which "the noble poet" was always too eager to assert, and was inclined to
+take liberties which his patron perhaps superciliously repelled. Mrs. Hunt
+does not seem to have been a very judicious person. "Trelawny here," said
+Byron jocularly, "has been speaking against my morals." "It is the first
+time I ever heard of them," she replied. Mr. Hunt, by his own admission,
+had "peculiar notions on the subject of money." Byron, on his part, was
+determined not to be "put upon," and doled out through his steward stated
+allowances to Hunt, who says that only "stern necessity and a large
+family" induced him to accept them. Hunt's expression that the 200_l_.
+was, _in the first instance_, a debt to Shelley, points to the conclusion
+that it was remitted on that poet's death. Besides this, Byron maintained
+the family till they left Genoa for Florence in 1823, and defrayed up to
+that date all their expenses. He gave his contributions to the _Liberal_
+gratis; and, again by Hunt's own confession, left to him and his brother
+the profits of the proprietorship. According to Mr. Galt "The whole extent
+of the pecuniary obligation appears not to have exceeded 500 _l_.; but,
+little or great, the manner in which it was recollected reflects no credit
+either on the head or heart of the debtor."
+
+Of the weaknesses on which the writer--bent on verifying Pope's lines on
+Atossa--from his vantage in the ground-floor, was enabled to dilate, many
+are but slightly magnified. We are told for instance, in very many words,
+that Byron clung to the privileges of his rank while wishing to seem above
+them; that he had a small library, and was a one-sided critic; that Bayle
+and Gibbon supplied him with the learning he had left at school; that,
+being a good rider with a graceful seat, he liked to be told of it; that
+he showed letters he ought not to have shown; that he pretended to think
+worse of Wordsworth than he did; that he knew little of art or music,
+adored Rossini, and called Rubens a dauber; that, though he wrote _Don
+Juan_ under gin and water, he had not a strong head, &c., &c. It is true,
+but not new. But when Hunt proceeds to say that Byron had no sentiment;
+that La Guiccioli did not really care much about him; that he admired
+Gifford because he was a sycophant, and Scott because he loved a lord;
+that he had no heart for anything except a feverish notoriety; that he was
+a miser from his birth, and had "as little regard for liberty as
+Allieri,"--it is new enough, but it is manifestly not true. Hunt's book,
+which begins with a caricature on the frontispiece, and is inspired in the
+main by uncharitableness, yet contains here and there gleams of a deeper
+insight than we find in all the volumes of Moore--an insight, which, in
+spite of his irritated egotism, is the mark of a man with the instincts of
+a poet, with some cosmopolitan sympathies, and a courage on occasion to
+avow them at any risk. "Lord Byron," he says truly, "has been too much
+admired by the English because he was sulky and wilful, and reflected in
+his own person their love of dictation and excitement. They owe his memory
+a greater regard, and would do it much greater honour if they admired him
+for letting them know they were not so perfect a nation as they supposed
+themselves, and that they might take as well as give lessons of humanity,
+by a candid comparison of notes with civilization at large."
+
+In July, when at Leghorn, the Gambas received orders to leave Tuscany; and
+on his return to Pisa, Byron, being persecuted by the police, began to
+prepare for another change. After entertaining projects about Greece,
+America, and Switzerland--Trelawny undertaking to have the "Bolivar"
+conveyed over the Alps to the Lake of Geneva--he decided on following his
+friends to Genoa. He left in September with La Guiccioli, passed by Lerici
+and Sestri, and then for the ten remaining mouths of his Italian life took
+up his quarters at Albaro, about a mile to the east of the city, in the
+Villa Saluzzo, which Mrs. Shelley had procured for him and his party. She
+herself settled with the Hunts--who travelled about the same time, at
+Byron's expense, but in their own company--in the neighbouring Casa
+Negroto. Not far off, Mr. Savage Landor was in possession of the Casa
+Pallavicini, but there was little intercourse between the three. Landor
+and Byron, in many respects more akin than any other two Englishmen of
+their age, were always separated by an unhappy bar or intervening mist.
+The only family with whom the poet maintained any degree of intimacy was
+that of the Earl of Blessington, consisting of the Earl himself--a gouty
+old gentleman, with stories about him of the past--the Countess, and her
+sister, Miss Power, and the "cupidon dechaine," the Anglo-French Count
+Alfred d'Orsay--who were to take part in stories of the future. In the
+spring of 1823, Byron persuaded them to occupy the Villa Paradiso, and was
+accustomed to accompany them frequently on horseback excursions along the
+coast to their favourite Nervi. It has been said that Lady Blessington's
+_Conversations with Lord Byron_ are, as regards trustworthiness, on a par
+with Landor's _Imaginary Conversations_. Let this be so, they are still of
+interest on points of fact which it must have been easier to record than
+to imagine. However adorned, or the reverse, by the fancies of a habitual
+novelist, they convey the impressions of a goodhumoured, lively, and
+fascinating woman, derived from a more or less intimate association with
+the most brilliant man of the age. Of his personal appearance--a matter of
+which she was a good judge--we have the following: "One of Byron's eyes
+was larger than the other; his nose was rather thick, so he was best seen
+in profile; his mouth was splendid, and his scornful expression was real,
+not affected; but a sweet smile often broke through his melancholy. He was
+at this time very pale and thin (which indicates the success of his
+regimen of reduction since leaving Venice). His hair was dark brown, here
+and there turning grey. His voice was harmonious, clear and low. There is
+some gaucherie in his walk, from his attempts to conceal his lameness.
+Ada's portrait is like him, and he is pleased at the likeness, but hoped
+she would not turn out to be clever--at any events not poetical. He is
+fond of gossip, and apt to speak slightingly of some of his friends, but
+is loyal to others. His great defect is flippancy, and a total want of
+self-possession." The narrator also dwells on his horror of interviewers,
+by whom at this time he was even more than usually beset. One visitor of
+the period ingenuously observes--"Certain persons will be chagrined to
+hear that Byron's mode of life does not furnish the smallest food for
+calumny." Another says, "I never saw a countenance more composed and
+still--I might even add, more sweet and prepossessing. But his temper was
+easily ruffled and for a whole day; he could not endure the ringing of
+bells, bribed his neighbours to repress their noises, and failing,
+retaliated by surpassing them; he never forgave Colonel Carr for breaking
+one of his dog's ribs, though he generally forgave injuries without
+forgetting them. He had a bad opinion of the inertness of the Genoese; for
+whatever he himself did he did with a will--'toto se corpore miscuit,' and
+was wont to assume a sort of dictatorial tone--as if 'I have said it, and
+it must be so' were enough."
+
+From these waifs and strays of gossip we return to a subject of deeper
+interest. The Countess of Blessington, with natural curiosity, was anxious
+to elicit from Byron some light on the mystery of his domestic affairs,
+and renewed the attempt previously made by Madame de Stael, to induce him
+to some movement towards a reconciliation with his wife. His reply to this
+overture was to show her a letter which he had written to Lady Byron from
+Pisa, but never forwarded, of the tone of which the following extracts
+must be a sufficient indication:--"I have to acknowledge the receipt of
+Ada's hair.... I also thank you for the inscription of the date and name;
+and I will tell you why. I believe they are the only two or three words of
+your hand-writing in my possession, for your letters I returned, and
+except the two words--or rather the one word 'household' written twice--in
+an old account book, I have no other. Every day which keeps us asunder
+should, after so long a period, rather soften our mutual feelings, which
+must always have one rallying-point as long as our child exists. We both
+made a bitter mistake, but now it is over, I considered our re-union as
+not impossible for more than a year after the separation, but then I gave
+up the hope. I am violent, but not malignant; for only fresh provocations
+can awaken my resentment. Remember that if you have injured me in aught,
+this forgiveness is something, and that if I have injured you, it is
+something more still, if it be true, as moralists assert, that the most
+offending are the least forgiving." "It is a strange business," says the
+Countess, about Lady Byron. "When he was praising her mental and personal
+qualifications, I asked him how all that he now said agreed with certain
+sarcasms supposed to be a reference to her in his works. He smiled, shook
+his head, and said, they were meant to spite and vex her, when he was
+wounded and irritated at her refusing to receive or answer his letters;
+that he was sorry he had written them, but might on similar provocations
+recur to the same vengeance." On another occasion he said, "Lady B.'s
+first idea is what is due to herself. I wish she thought a little more of
+what is due to others. My besetting sin is a want of that self-respect
+which she has in excess. When I have broken out, on slight provocation,
+into one of my ungovernable fits of rage, her calmness piqued and seemed
+to reproach me; it gave her an air of superiority that vexed and increased
+my _mauvaise humeur_." To Lady Blessington as to every one, he always
+spoke of Mrs. Leigh with the same unwavering admiration, love, and
+respect.
+
+"My first impressions were melancholy--my poor mother gave them: but to my
+sister, who, incapable of wrong herself, suspected no wrong in others, I
+owe the little good of which I can boast: and had I earlier known her it
+might have influenced my destiny. Augusta was to me in the hour of need a
+tower of strength. Her affection was my last rallying-point, and is now
+the only bright spot that the horizon of England offers to my view. She
+has given me such good advice--and yet finding me incapable of following
+it, loved and pitied me but the more because I was erring." Similarly, in
+the height of his spleen, writes Leigh Hunt--"I believe there did exist
+one person to whom he would have been generous, if she pleased: perhaps
+was so. At all events, he left her the bulk of his property, and always
+spoke of her with the greatest esteem. This was his sister, Mrs. Leigh. He
+told me she used to call him 'Baby Byron.' It was easy to see that of the
+two persons she had by far the greater judgment."
+
+Byron having laid aside _Don Juan_ for more than a year, in deference to
+La Guiccioli, was permitted to resume it again, in July, 1822, on a
+promise to observe the proprieties. Cantos vi.-xi. were written at Pisa.
+Cantos xii.-xvi. at Genoa, in 1823. These latter portions of the poem were
+published by John Hunt. His other works of the period are of minor
+consequence. The _Age of Bronze_ is a declamation, rather than a satire,
+directed against the Convention of Cintra and the Congress of Verona,
+especially Lord Londonderry's part in the latter, only remarkable, from
+its advice to the Greeks, to dread--
+
+ The false friend worse than the infuriate foe;
+
+i.e. to prefer the claw of the Tartar savage to the paternal hug of the
+great Bear--
+
+ Better still toil for masters, than await,
+ The slave of slaves, before a Russian gate.
+
+In the _Island_--a tale of the mutiny of the "Bounty"--he reverts to the
+manner and theme of his old romances, finding a new scene in the Pacific
+for the exercise of his fancy. In this piece his love of nautical
+adventure reappears, and his idealization of primitive life, caught from
+Rousseau and Chateaubriand. There is more repose about this poem than in
+any of the author's other compositions. In its pages the sea seems to
+plash about rocks and caves that bask under a southern sun. "'Byron, the
+sorcerer,' he can do with me what he will," said old Dr. Parr, on reading
+it. As the swan-song of the poet's sentimental verse, it has a pleasing if
+not pathetic calm. During the last years in Italy he planned an epic on
+the Conquest, and a play on the subject of Hannibal, neither of which was
+executed.
+
+In the criticism of a famous work there is often little left to do but to
+criticise the critics--to bring to a focus the most salient things that
+have been said about it, to eliminate the absurd from the sensible, the
+discriminating from the commonplace. _Don Juan_, more than any of its
+precursors, _is_ Byron, and it has been similarly handled. The early
+cantos were ushered into the world amid a chorus of mingled applause and
+execration. The minor Reviews, representing middle-class respectability,
+were generally vituperative, and the higher authorities divided in their
+judgments. The _British Magazine_ said that "his lordship had degraded his
+personal character by the composition;" the _London_, that the poem was "a
+satire on decency;" the _Edinburgh Monthly_, that it was "a melancholy
+spectacle;" the _Eclectic_, that it was "an outrage worthy of
+detestation." _Blackwood_ declared that the author was "brutally outraging
+all the best feelings of humanity." Moore characterizes it as "the most
+painful display of the versatility of genius that has ever been left for
+succeeding ages to wonder at or deplore." Jeffrey found in the whole
+composition "a tendency to destroy all belief in the reality of virtue;"
+and Dr. John Watkins classically named it "the Odyssey of Immorality."
+"_Don Juan_ will be read," wrote one critic, "as long as satire, wit,
+mirth, and supreme excellence shall be esteemed among men." "Stick to _Don
+Juan_," exhorted another; "it is the only sincere thing you have written,
+and it will live after all your _Harolds_ have ceased to be 'a
+schoolgirl's tale, the wonder of an hour.' It is the best of all your
+works--the most spirited, the most straightforward, the most interesting,
+the most poetical." "It is a work," said Goethe, "full of soul, bitterly
+savage in its misanthropy, exquisitely delicate in its tenderness."
+Shelley confessed, "It fulfils in a certain degree what I have long
+preached, the task of producing something wholly new and relative to the
+age, and yet surpassingly beautiful." And Sir Walter Scott, in the midst
+of a hearty panegyric: "It has the variety of Shakespeare himself. Neither
+_Childe Harold_, nor the most beautiful of Byron's earlier tales, contain
+more exquisite poetry than is to be found scattered through the cantos of
+_Don Juan_, amidst verses which the author seems to have thrown from him
+with an effort as spontaneous as that of a tree resigning its leaves."
+
+One noticeable feature about these comments is their sincerity: reviewing,
+however occasionally one-sided, had not then sunk to be the mere register
+of adverse or friendly cliques; and, with all his anxiety for its verdict,
+Byron never solicited the favour of any portion of the press. Another is,
+the fact that the adverse critics missed their mark. They had not learnt
+to say of a book of which they disapproved, that it was weak or dull: in
+pronouncing it to be vicious, they helped to promote its sale; and the
+most decried has been the most widely read of the author's works. Many of
+the readers of _Don Juan_ have, it must be confessed, been found among
+those least likely to admire in it what is most admirable--who have been
+attracted by the very excesses of buffoonery, violations of good taste,
+and occasionally almost vulgar slang, which disfigure its pages. Their
+patronage is, at the best, of no more value than that of a mob gathered by
+a showy Shakespearian revival, and it has laid the volume open to the
+charge of being adapted "laudari ab illaudatis." But the welcome of the
+work in other quarters is as indubitably duo to higher qualities. In
+writing _Don Juan_, Byron attempted something that had never been done
+before, and his genius so chimed with his enterprise that it need never be
+done again. "Down," cries M. Chasles, "with the imitators who did their
+host to make his name ridiculous." In commenting on their failure, an
+Athenaeum critic has explained the pre-established fitness of the ottava
+rima--the first six lines of which are a dance, and the concluding couplet
+a "breakdown"--for the mock-heroic. Byron's choice of this measure may
+have been suggested by Whistlecraft; but, he had studied its cadence in
+Pulci, and the _Novelle Galanti_ of Casti, to whom he is indebted for
+other features of his satire; and he added to what has been well termed
+its characteristic jauntiness, by his almost constant use of the double
+rhyme. That the ottava rima is out of place in consistently pathetic
+poetry, may be seen from its obvious misuse in Keats's _Pot of Basil_.
+Many writers, from Tennant and Frere to Moultrie, have employed it in
+burlesque or more society verse; but Byron alone has employed it
+triumphantly, for he has made it the vehicle of thoughts grave as well as
+gay, of "black spirits and white, red spirits and grey," of sparkling
+fancy, bitter sarcasm, and tender memories. He has swept into the pages of
+his poem the experience of thirty years of a life so crowded with vitality
+that our sense of the plethora of power which it exhibits makes us ready
+to condone its lapses. Byron, it has been said, balances himself on a
+ladder like other acrobats; but alone, like the Japanese master of the
+art, he all the while bears on his shoulders the weight of a man. Much of
+_Don Juan_ is as obnoxious to criticism in detail as his earlier work; it
+has every mark of being written in hot haste. In the midst of the most
+serious passages (e.g. the "Ave Maria") we are checked in our course by
+bathos or commonplace and thrown where the writer did not mean to throw
+us: but the mocking spirit is so prevailingly present that we are often
+left in doubt as to his design, and what is in _Harold_ an outrage is in
+this case only a flaw. His command over the verse itself is almost
+miraculous: he glides from extreme to extreme, from punning to pathos,
+from melancholy to mad merriment, sighing or laughing by the way at his
+readers or at himself or at the stanzas. Into them he can fling anything
+under the sun, from a doctor's prescription to a metaphysical theory.
+
+ When Bishop Berkeley said there was no matter,
+ And proved it, 'twas no matter what he said,
+
+is as cogent a refutation of idealism as the cumbrous wit of Scotch
+logicians.
+
+The popularity of the work is due not mainly to the verbal skill which
+makes it rank as the _cleverest_ of English verse compositions, to its
+shoals of witticisms, its winged words, telling phrases, and incomparable
+transitions; but to the fact that it continues to address a large class
+who are not in the ordinary sense of the word lovers of poetry. _Don Juan_
+is emphatically the poem of intelligent men of middle age, who have grown
+weary of mere sentiment, and yet retain enough of sympathetic feeling to
+desire at times to recall it. Such minds, crusted like Plato's Glaucus
+with the world, are yet pervious to appeals to the spirit that survives
+beneath the dry dust amid which they move; but only at rare intervals can
+they accompany the pure lyrist "singing as if he would never be old," and
+they are apt to turn with some impatience even from _Romeo and Juliet_ to
+_Hamlet_ and _Macbeth_. To them, on the other hand, the hard wit of
+_Hudibras_ is equally tiresome, and more distasteful; their chosen friend
+is the humourist who, inspired by a subtle perception of the
+contradictions of life, sees matter for smiles in sorrow, and tears in
+laughter. Byron was not, in the highest sense, a great humourist; he does
+not blend together the two phases, as they are blended in single sentences
+or whole chapters of Sterne, in the April-sunshine of Richter, or in
+_Sartor Resartus_; but he comes near to produce the same effect by his
+unequalled power of alternating them. His wit is seldom hard, never dry,
+for it is moistened by the constant juxtaposition of sentiment. His
+tenderness is none the less genuine that he is perpetually jerking it
+away--an equally favourite fashion with Carlyle,--as if he could not trust
+himself to be serious for fear of becoming sentimental; and, in
+recollection of his frequent exhibitions of unaffected hysteria, we accept
+his own confession--
+
+ If I laugh at any mortal thing,
+ 'Tis that I may not weep,
+
+as a perfectly sincere comment on the most sincere, and therefore in many
+respects the most effective, of his works. He has, after his way,
+endeavoured in grave prose and light verse to defend it against its
+assailants; saying, "In _Don Juan_ I take a vicious and unprincipled
+character, and lead him through those ranks of society whose
+accomplishments cover and cloak their vices, and paint the natural
+effects;" and elsewhere, that he means to make his scamp "end as a member
+of the Society for the Suppression of Vice, or by the guillotine, or in an
+unhappy marriage." It were easy to dilate on the fact that in interpreting
+the phrases of the satirist into the language of the moralist we often
+require to read them backwards: Byron's own statement, "I hate a motive,"
+is, however, more to the point:
+
+ But the fact is that I have nothing plann'd,
+ Unless it were to be a moment merry--
+ A novel word in my vocabulary.
+
+_Don Juan_ can only be credited with a text in the sense in which every
+large experience, of its own accord, conveys its lesson. It was to the
+author a picture of the world as he saw it; and it is to us a mirror in
+which every attribute of his genius, every peculiarity of his nature, is
+reflected without distortion. After the audacious though brilliant
+opening, and the unfortunately pungent reference to the poet's domestic
+affairs, we find in the famous storm (c. ii.) a bewildering epitome of his
+prevailing manner. Home-sickness, sea-sickness, the terror of the tempest,
+"wailing, blasphemy, devotion," the crash of the wreck, the wild farewell,
+"the bubbling cry of some strong swimmer in his agony," the horrors of
+famine, the tale of the two fathers, the beautiful apparitions of the
+rainbow and the bird, the feast on Juan's spaniel, his reluctance to dine
+on "his pastor and his master," the consequences of eating Pedrillo,--all
+follow each other like visions in the phantasmagoria of a nightmare, till
+at last the remnant of the crew are drowned by a ridiculous rhyme--
+
+ Finding no place for their landing better,
+ They ran the boat ashore,--and overset her.
+
+Then comes the episode of Haidee, "a long low island song of ancient
+days," the character of the girl herself being like a thread of pure gold
+running through the fabric of its surroundings, motley in every page;
+e.g., after the impassioned close of the "Isles of Greece," we have the
+stanza:--
+
+ Thus sang, or would, or could, or should, have sung,
+ The modern Greek, in tolerable verse;
+ If not like Orpheus quite, when Greece was young,
+ Yet in those days he might have done much worse--
+
+with which the author dashes away the romance of the song, and then
+launches into a tirade against Bob Southey's epic and Wordsworth's pedlar
+poems. This vein exhausted, we come to the "Ave Maria," one of the most
+musical, and seemingly heartfelt, hymns in the language. The close of the
+ocean pastoral (in c. iv.) is the last of pathetic narrative in the book;
+but the same feeling that "mourns o'er the beauty of the Cyclades," often
+re-emerges in shorter passages. The fifth and sixth cantos, in spite of
+the glittering sketch of Gulbeyaz, and tho fawn-like image of Dudu, are
+open to the charge of diffuseness, and the character of Johnson is a
+failure. From the seventh to the tenth, the poem decidedly dips, partly
+because the writer had never been in Russia; then it again rises, and
+shows no sign of falling off to the end.
+
+No part of the work has more suggestive interest or varied power than some
+of the later cantos, in which Juan is whirled through the vortex of the
+fashionable life which Byron knew so well, loved so much, and at last
+esteemed so little. There is no richer piece of descriptive writing in his
+works than that of Newstead (in c. xiii.); nor is there any analysis of
+female character so subtle as that of the Lady Adeline. Conjectures as to
+the originals of imaginary portraits, are generally futile; but Miss
+Millpond--not Donna Inez--is obviously Lady Byron; in Adeline we may
+suspect that at Genoa he was drawing from the life in the Villa Paradiso;
+while Aurora Raby seems to be an idealization of La Guiccioli:--
+
+ Early in years, and yet more infantine
+ In figure, she had something of sublime
+ In eyes, which sadly shone, as seraphs' shine:
+ All youth--but with an aspect beyond time;
+ Radiant and grave--us pitying man's decline;
+ Mournful--but mournful of another's crime,
+ She look'd as if she sat by Eden's door,
+ And grieved for those who could return no more.
+
+ She was a Catholic, too, sincere, austere,
+ As far as her own gentle heart allow'd,
+ And deem'd that fallen worship far more dear,
+ Perhaps, because 'twas fallen: her sires were proud
+ Of deeds and days, when they had fill'd the ear
+ Of nations, and had never bent or bow'd
+ To novel power; and, as she was the last,
+ She held her old faith and old feelings fast.
+
+ She gazed upon a world she scarcely knew,
+ As seeking not to know it; silent, lone,
+ As grows a flower, thus quietly she grew,
+ And kept her heart serene within its zone.
+
+Constantly, towards the close of the work, there is an echo of home and
+country, a half involuntary cry after--
+
+ The love of higher things and better days;
+ Th'unbounded hope, and heavenly ignorance
+ Of what is call'd the world and the world's ways.
+
+In the concluding stanza of the last completed canto, beginning--
+
+ Between two worlds life hovers like a star,
+ 'Twixt night and morn, on the horizon's verge--
+
+we have a condensation of the refrain of the poet's philosophy; but the
+main drift of the later books is a satire on London society. There are
+elements in a great city which may be wrought into something nobler than
+satire, for all the energies of the age are concentrated where passion is
+fiercest and thought intensest, amid the myriad sights and sounds of its
+glare and gloom. But those scenes, and the actors in them, are apt also to
+induce the frame of mind in which a prose satirist describes himself as
+reclining under an arcade of the Pantheon: "Not the Pantheon by the Piazza
+Navona, where the immortal gods were worshipped--the immortal gods now
+dead; but the Pantheon in Oxford Street. Have not Selwyn, and Walpole, and
+March, and Carlisle figured there? Has not Prince Florizel flounced
+through the hall in his rustling domino, and danced there in powdered
+splendour? O my companions, I have drunk many a bout with you, and always
+found 'Vanitas Vanitatum' written on the bottom of the pot." This is the
+mind in which _Don Juan_ interprets the universe, and paints the still
+living court of Florizel and his buffoons. A "nondescript and ever varying
+rhyme"--"a versified aurora borealis," half cynical, half Epicurean, it
+takes a partial though a subtle view of that microcosm on stilts called
+the great world. It complains that in the days of old "men made the
+manners--manners now make men." It concludes--
+
+ Good company's a chess-board, there are kings,
+ Queens, bishops, knights, rooks, pawns; the world's a game.
+
+It passes from a reflection on "the dreary _fuimus_ of all things here" to
+the advice--
+
+ But "carpe diem," Juan, "carpe, carpe!"
+ To-morrow sees another race as gay
+ And transient, and devour'd by the same harpy.
+ "Life's a poor player,"--then play out the play.
+
+It was the natural conclusion of the foregone stage of Byron's career.
+Years had given him power, but they were years in which his energies were
+largely wasted. Self-indulgence had not petrified his feeling, but it had
+thrown wormwood into its springs. He had learnt to look on existence as a
+walking shadow, and was strong only with the strength of a sincere
+despair.
+
+ Through life's road, so dim and dirty,
+ I have dragg'd to three and thirty.
+ What have those years left to me?
+ Nothing, except thirty-three.
+
+These lines are the summary of one who had drained the draught of pleasure
+to the dregs of bitterness.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X.
+
+
+1821-1824.
+
+POLITICS--THE CARBONARI--EXPEDITION TO GREECE--DEATH.
+
+In leaving Venice for Ravenna, Byron passed from the society of gondoliers
+and successive sultanas to a comparatively domestic life, with a mistress
+who at least endeavoured to stimulate some of his higher aspirations, and
+smiled upon his wearing the sword along with the lyre. In the last episode
+of his constantly chequered and too voluptuous career, we have the waking
+of Sardanapalus realized in the transmutation of the fantastical Harold
+into a practical strategist, financier, and soldier. No one ever lived
+who, in the same space, more thoroughly ran the gauntlet of existence.
+Having exhausted all other sources of vitality and intoxication--travel,
+gallantry, and verse--it remained for the despairing poet to become a
+hero. But he was also moved by a public passion, the genuineness of which
+there is no reasonable ground to doubt. Like Alfieri and Rousseau, he had
+taken for his motto, "I am of the opposition;" and, as Dante under a
+republic called for a monarchy, Byron, under monarchies at home and
+abroad, called for a commonwealth. Amid the inconsistencies of his
+political sentiment, he had been consistent in so much love of liberty as
+led him to denounce oppression, even when he had no great faith in the
+oppressed--whether English, or Italians, or Greeks.
+
+Byron regarded the established dynasties of the continent with a sincere
+hatred. He talks of the "more than infernal tyranny" of the House of
+Austria. To his fancy, as to Shelley's, New England is the star of the
+future. Attracted by a strength or rather force of character akin to his
+own, he worshipped Napoleon, even when driven to confess that "the hero
+had sunk into a king." He lamented his overthrow; but, above all, that he
+was beaten by "three stupid, legitimate old dynasty boobies of regular
+sovereigns." "I write in ipecacuanha that the Bourbons are restored."
+"What right have we to prescribe laws to France? Here we are retrograding
+to the dull, stupid old system, balance of Europe--poising straws on
+kings' noses, instead of wringing them off." "The king-times are fast
+finishing. There will be blood shed like water, and tears like mist; but
+the peoples will conquer in the end. I shall not live to see it, but I
+foresee it." "Give me a republic. Look in the history of the earth--Rome,
+Greece, Venice, Holland, France, America, our too short Commonwealth--and
+compare it with what they did under masters."
+
+His serious political verses are all in the strain of the lines on
+Wellington--
+
+ Never had mortal man such opportunity--
+ Except Napoleon--or abused it more;
+ You might have freed fallen Europe from the unity
+ Of tyrants, and been blessed from shore to shore.
+
+An enthusiasm for Italy, which survived many disappointments, dictated
+some of the most impressive passages of his _Harold_, and inspired the
+_Lament of Tasso_ and the _Ode on Venice_. The _Prophecy of Dante_
+contains much that has since proved prophetic--
+
+ What is there wanting, then, to set thee free,
+ And show thy beauty in its fullest light?
+ To make the Alps impassable; and we,
+ Her sons, may do this with one deed--_Unite_!
+
+His letters reiterate the same idea, in language even more emphatic. "It
+is no great matter, supposing that Italy could be liberated, who or what
+is sacrificed. It is a grand object--the very poetry of politics; only
+think--a free Italy!" Byron acted on his assertion that a man ought to do
+more for society than write verses. Mistrusting its leaders, and detesting
+the wretched lazzaroni, who "would have betrayed themselves and all the
+world," he yet threw himself heart and soul into the insurrection of 1820,
+saying, "Whatever I can do by money, means, or person, I will venture
+freely for their freedom." He joined the secret society of the Carbonari,
+wrote an address to the Liberal government set up in Naples, supplied arms
+and a refuge in his house, which he was prepared to convert into a
+fortress. In February, 1821, on the rout of the Neapolitans by the
+Austrians, the conspiracy was crushed. Byron, who "had always an idea that
+it would be bungled," expressed his fear that the country would be thrown
+back for 500 years into barbarism, and the Countess Guiccioli confessed
+with tears that the Italians must return to composing and strumming
+operatic airs. Carbonarism having collapsed, it of course made way for a
+reaction; but the encouragement and countenance of the English poet and
+peer helped to keep alive the smouldering fire that Mazzini fanned into a
+flame, till Cavour turned it to a practical purpose, and the dreams of the
+idealists of 1820 were finally realized.
+
+On the failure of the luckless conspiracy, Byron naturally betook himself
+to history, speculation, satire, and ideas of a journalistic propaganda;
+but all through, his mind was turning to the renewal of the action which
+was his destiny. "If I live ten years longer," he writes in 1822, "you
+will see that it is not all over with me. I don't mean in literature, for
+that is nothing--and I do not think it was my vocation; but I shall do
+something." The Greek war of liberation opened a new field for the
+exercise of his indomitable energy. This romantic struggle, begun in
+April, 1821, was carried on for two years with such remarkable success,
+that at the close of 1822 Greece was beginning to be recognized as an
+independent state; but in the following months the tide seemed to turn;
+dissensions broke out among the leaders, the spirit of intrigue seemed to
+stifle patriotism, and the energies of the insurgents were hampered for
+want of the sinews of war. There was a danger of the movement being
+starved out, and the committee of London sympathizers--of which the poet's
+intimate friend and frequent correspondent, Mr. Douglas Kinnaird, and
+Captain Blaquiere, were leading promoters--was impressed with the
+necessity of procuring funds in support of the cause. With a view to this
+it seemed of consequence to attach to it some shining name, and men's
+thoughts almost inevitably turned to Byron. No other Englishman seemed so
+fit to be associated with the enterprise as the warlike poet, who had
+twelve years before linked his fame to that of "grey Marathon" and
+"Athena's tower," and, more recently immortalized the isles on which he
+cast so many a longing glance. Hobhouse broke the subject to him early in
+the spring of 1823: the committee opened communications in April. After
+hesitating through May, in June Byron consented to meet Blaquiere at
+Zante, and, on hearing the results of the captain's expedition to the
+Morea, to decide on future steps. His share in this enterprise has been
+assigned to purely personal and comparatively mean motives. He was, it is
+said, disgusted with his periodical, sick of his editor, tired of his
+mistress, and bent on any change, from China to Peru, that would give him
+a new theatre for display. One grows weary of the perpetual half-truths of
+inveterate detraction. It is granted that Byron was restless, vain,
+imperious, never did anything without a desire to shine in the doing of
+it, and was to a great degree the slave of circumstances. Had the
+_Liberal_ proved a lamp to the nations, instead of a mere "red flag
+flaunted in the face of John Bull," he might have cast anchor at Genoa;
+but the whole drift of his work and life demonstrates that he was capable
+on occasion of merging himself in what he conceived to be great causes,
+especially in their evil days. Of the Hunts he may have had enough; but
+the invidious statement about La Guiccioli has no foundation, other than a
+somewhat random remark of Shelley, and the fact that he left her nothing
+in his will. It is distinctly ascertained that she expressly prohibited
+him from doing so; they continued to correspond to the last, and her
+affectionate, though unreadable, reminiscences, are sufficient proof that
+she at no time considered herself to be neglected, injured, or aggrieved.
+
+Byron indeed left Italy in an unsettled state of mind: he spoke of
+returning in a few months, and as the period for his departure approached,
+became more and more irresolute. A presentiment of his death seemed to
+brood over a mind always superstitious, though never fanatical. Shortly
+before his own departure, the Blessingtons were preparing to leave Genoa
+for England. On the evening of his farewell call he began to speak of his
+voyage with despondency, saying, "Here we are all now together; but when
+and where shall we meet again? I have a sort of boding that we see each
+other for the last time, as something tells me I shall never again return
+from Greece:" after which remark he leant his head on the sofa, and burst
+into one of his hysterical fits of tears. The next week was given to
+preparations for an expedition, which, entered on with mingled
+motives--sentimental, personal, public--became more real and earnest to
+Byron at every step he took. He knew all the vices of the "hereditary
+bondsmen" among whom he was going, and went among them, with yet
+unquenched aspirations, but with the bridle of discipline in his hand,
+resolved to pave the way towards the nation becoming better, by devoting
+himself to making it free.
+
+On the morning of July 14th (1823) he embarked in the brig "Hercules,"
+with Trelawny, Count Pietro Gamba, who remained with him to the last,
+Bruno a young Italian doctor, Scott the captain of the vessel, and eight
+servants, including Fletcher, besides the crew. They had on board two
+guns, with other arms and ammunition, five horses, an ample supply of
+medicines, with 50,000 Spanish dollars in coin and bills. The start was
+inauspicious. A violent squall drove them back to port, and in the course
+of a last ride with Gamba to Albaro, Byron asked, "Where shall we be in a
+year?" On the same day of the same month of 1824 he was carried to the
+tomb of his ancestors. They again set sail on the following evening, and
+in five days reached Leghorn, where the poet received a salutation in
+verse, addressed to him by Goethe, and replied to it. Here Mr. Hamilton
+Brown, a Scotch gentleman with considerable knowledge of Greek affairs,
+joined the party, and induced them to change their course to Cephalonia,
+for the purpose of obtaining the advice and assistance of the English
+resident, Colonel Napier. The poet occupied himself during the voyage
+mainly in reading--among other books, Scott's _Life of Swift_, Grimm's
+_Correspondence_, La Rochefoucauld, and Las Casas--and watching the
+classic or historic shores which they skirted, especially noting Elba,
+Soracte, the Straits of Messina, and Etna. In passing Stromboli he said to
+Trelawny, "You will see this scene in a fifth canto of _Childe Harold_."
+On his companions suggesting that he should write some verses on the spot,
+he tried to do so, but threw them away, with the remark, "I cannot write
+poetry at will, as you smoke tobacco." Trelawny confesses that he was
+never on shipboard with a better companion, and that a severer test of
+good fellowship it is impossible to apply. Together they shot at gulls or
+empty bottles, and swam every morning in the sea. Early in August they
+reached their destination. Coming in sight of the Morea, the poet said to
+Trelawny, "I feel as if the eleven long years of bitterness I have passed
+through, since I was here, were taken from my shoulders, and I was
+scudding through the Greek Archipelago with old Bathurst in his frigate."
+Byron remained at or about Cephalonia till the close of the year. Not long
+after his arrival he made an excursion to Ithaca, and, visiting the
+monastery at Vathi, was received by the abbot with great ceremony, which,
+in a fit of irritation, brought on by a tiresome ride on a mule, he
+returned with unusual discourtesy; but next morning, on his giving a
+donation to their alms-box, he was dismissed with the blessing of the
+monks. "If this isle were mine," he declared on his way back, "I would
+break my staff and bury my book." A little later, Brown and Trelawny being
+sent off with letters to the provisional government, the former returned
+with some Greek emissaries to London, to negotiate a loan; the latter
+attached himself to Odysseus, the chief of the republican party at Athens,
+and never again saw Byron alive. The poet, after spending a month on board
+the "Hercules," dismissed the vessel, and hired a house for Gamba and
+himself at Metaxata, a healthy village about four miles from the capital
+of the island. Meanwhile, Blaquiere, neglecting his appointment at Zante,
+had gone to Corfu, and thence to England. Colonel Napier being absent from
+Cephalonia, Byron had some pleasant social intercourse with his deputy,
+but, unable to get from him any authoritative information, was left
+without advice, to be besieged by letters and messages from the factions.
+Among these there were brought to him hints that the Greeks wanted a king,
+and he is reported to have said, "If they make me the offer, I will
+perhaps not reject it."
+
+The position would doubtless have been acceptable to a man who never--amid
+his many self-deceptions--affected to deny that he was ambitious: and who
+can say what might not have resulted for Greece, had the poet lived to add
+lustre to her crown? In the meantime, while faring more frugally than a
+day-labourer, he yet surrounded himself with a show of royal state, had
+his servants armed with gilt helmets, and gathered around him a body-guard
+of Suliotes. These wild mercenaries becoming turbulent, he was obliged to
+despatch them to Mesolonghi, then threatened with siege by the Turks and
+anxiously waiting relief. During his residence at Cephalonia, Byron was
+gratified by the interest evinced in him by the English residents. Among
+these the physician, Dr. Kennedy, a worthy Scotchman, who imagined himself
+to be a theologian with a genius for conversion, was conducting a series
+of religious meetings at Argostoli, when the poet expressed a wish to be
+present at one of them. After listening, it is said, to a set of
+discourses that occupied the greater part of twelve hours, he seems, for
+one reason or another, to have felt called on to enter the lists, and
+found himself involved in the series of controversial dialogues afterwards
+published in a substantial book. This volume, interesting in several
+respects, is one of the most charming examples of unconscious irony in the
+language, and it is matter of regret that our space does not admit of the
+abridgment of several of its pages. They bear testimony, on the one hand,
+to Byron's capability of patience, and frequent sweetness of temper under
+trial; on the other, to Kennedy's utter want of humour, and to his
+courageous honesty. The curiously confronted interlocutors, in the course
+of the missionary and subsequent private meetings, ran over most of the
+ground debated between opponents and apologists of the Calvinistic faith,
+which Kennedy upheld without stint. The _Conversations_ add little to what
+we already know of Byron's religious opinions; nor is it easy to say where
+he ceases to be serious and begins to banter, or vice versa. He evidently
+wished to show that in argument he was good at fence, and could handle a
+theologian as skilfully as a foil. At the same time he wished if possible,
+though, as appears, in vain, to get some light on a subject with regard to
+which in his graver moods he was often exercised. On some points he is
+explicit. He makes an unequivocal protest against the doctrines of eternal
+punishment and infant damnation, saying that if the rest of mankind were
+to be damned, he "would rather keep them company than creep into heaven
+alone." On questions of inspiration, and the deeper problems of human
+life, he is less distinct, being naturally inclined to a speculative
+necessitarianism, and disposed to admit original depravity; but he did not
+see his way out of the maze through the Atonement, and held that prayer
+had only significance as a devotional affection of the heart. Byron showed
+a remarkable familiarity with the Scriptures, and with parts of Barrow,
+Chillingworth, and Stillingfleet; but on Kennedy's lending for his
+edification Boston's _Fourfold State_, he returned it with the remark that
+it was too deep for him. On another occasion he said, "Do you know I am
+nearly reconciled to St. Paul, for he says there is no difference between
+the Jews and the Greeks? and I am exactly of the same opinion, for the
+character of both is equally vile." The good Scotchman's religious
+self-confidence is throughout free from intellectual pride; and his own
+confession, "This time I suspect his lordship had the best of it," might
+perhaps be applied to the whole discussion.
+
+Critics who have little history and less war have been accustomed to
+attribute Byron's lingering at Cephalonia to indolence and indecision;
+they write as if he ought on landing on Greek soil to have put himself at
+the head of an army and stormed Constantinople. Those who know more,
+confess that the delay was deliberate, and that it was judicious. The
+Hellenic uprising was animated by the spirit of a "lion after slumber,"
+but it had the heads of a Hydra hissing and tearing at one another. The
+chiefs who defended the country by their arms, compromised her by their
+arguments, and some of her best fighters were little better than pirates
+and bandits. Greece was a prey to factions--republican, monarchic,
+aristocratic--representing naval, military, and territorial interests, and
+each beset by the adventurers who flock round every movement, only
+representing their own. During the first two years of success they were
+held in embryo; during the later years of disaster, terminated by the
+allies at Navarino, they were buried; during the interlude of Byron's
+residence, when the foes were like hounds in the leash, waiting for a
+renewal of the struggle, they were rampant. Had he joined any one of them
+he would have degraded himself to the level of a mere condottiere, and
+helped to betray the common cause. Beset by solicitations to go to Athens,
+to the Morea, to Acarnania, he resolutely held apart, biding his time,
+collecting information, making himself known as a man of affairs,
+endeavouring to conciliate rival clamants for pension or place, and
+carefully watching the tide of war. Numerous anecdotes of the period
+relate to acts of public or private benevolence, which endeared him to the
+population of the island; but he was on the alert against being fleeced or
+robbed. "The bulk of the English," writes Colonel Napier, "came expecting
+to find the Peloponnesus filled with Plutarch's men, and returned thinking
+the inhabitants of Newgate more moral. Lord Byron judged the Greeks
+fairly, and knew that allowance must be made for emancipated slaves."
+Among other incidents we hear of his passing a group, who were "shrieking
+and howling as in Ireland" over some men buried in the fall of a bank; he
+snatched a spade, began to dig, and threatened to horsewhip the peasants
+unless they followed his example. On November 30th he despatched to the
+central government a remarkable state paper, in which he dwells on the
+fatal calamity of a civil war, and says that unless union and order are
+established all hopes of a loan--which being every day more urgent, he was
+in letters to England constantly pressing--are at an end. "I desire," he
+concluded, "the well being of Greece, and nothing else. I will do all I
+can to secure it; but I will never consent that the English public be
+deceived as to the real state of affairs. You have fought gloriously; act
+honourably towards your fellow-citizens and the world, and it will then no
+more be said, as has been repeated for two thousand years, with the Roman
+historians, that Philopoemen was the last of the Grecians."
+
+Prince Alexander Mavrocordatos--the most prominent of the practical
+patriotic leaders--having been deposed from the presidency, was sent to
+regulate the affairs of Western Greece, and was now on his way with a
+fleet to relieve Mesolonghi, in attempting which the brave Marco Bozzaris
+had previously fallen. In a letter, opening communication with a man for
+whom he always entertained a high esteem, Byron writes, "Colonel Stanhope
+has arrived from London, charged by our committee to act in concert with
+me.... Greece is at present placed between three measures--either to
+reconquer her liberty, to become a dependence of the sovereigns of Europe,
+or to return to a Turkish province. She has the choice only of these three
+alternatives. Civil war is but a road that leads to the two latter."
+
+At length the long looked-for fleet arrived, and the Turkish squadron,
+with the loss of a treasure-ship, retired up the Gulf of Lepanto.
+Mavrocordatos on entering Mesolonghi lost no time in inviting the poet to
+join him, and placed a brig at his disposal, adding, "I need not tell you
+to what a pitch your presence is desired by everybody, or what a
+prosperous direction it will give to all our affairs. Your counsels will
+be listened to like oracles."
+
+At the same date Stanhope writes, "The people in the streets are looking
+forward to his lordship's arrival as they would to the coming of the
+Messiah." Byron was unable to start in the ship sent for him; but in spite
+of medical warnings, a few days later, i.e. December 28th, he embarked in
+a small fast-sailing sloop called a mistico, while the servants and
+baggage were stowed in another and larger vessel under the charge of Count
+Gamba. From Gamba's graphic account of the voyage we may take the
+following:--"We sailed together till after ten at night; the wind
+favourable, a clear sky, the air fresh, but not sharp. Our sailors sang
+alternately patriotic songs, monotonous indeed, but to persons in our
+situation extremely touching, and we took part in them. We were all, but
+Lord Byron particularly, in excellent spirits. The mistico sailed the
+fastest. When the waves divided us, and our voices could no longer reach
+each other, we made signals by firing pistols and carbines. To-morrow we
+meet at Mesolonghi--to morrow. Thus, full of confidence and spirits, we
+sailed along. At twelve we were out of sight of each other."
+
+Byron's vessel, separated from her consort, came into the close proximity
+of a Turkish frigate, and had to take refuge among the Scrofes' rocks.
+Emerging thence, he attained a small seaport of Acarnania, called
+Dragomestri, whence sallying forth on the 2nd of January under the convoy
+of some Greek gunboats, he was nearly wrecked. On the 4th Byron made, when
+violently heated, an imprudent plunge in the sea, and was never afterwards
+free from a pain in his bones. On the 5th he arrived at Mesolonghi, and
+was received with salvoes of musketry and music. Gamba was waiting him.
+His vessel, the "Bombarda," had been taken by the Ottoman frigate, but the
+captain of the latter, recognizing the Count as having formerly saved his
+life in the Black Sea, made interest in his behalf with Yussuf Pasha at
+Patras, and obtained his discharge. In recompense, the poet subsequently
+sent to the Pasha some Turkish prisoners, with a letter requesting him to
+endeavour to mitigate the inhumanities of the war. Byron brought to the
+Greeks at Mesolonghi the 4000_l_. of his personal loan (applied, in the
+first place, to defraying the expenses of the fleet), with the spell of
+his name and presence. He was shortly afterwards appointed to the command
+of the intended expedition against Lepanto, and, with this view, again
+took into his pay five hundred Suliotes. An approaching general assembly
+to organize the forces of the west, had brought together a motley crew,
+destitute, discontented, and more likely to wage war upon each other than
+on their enemies. Byron's closest associates during the ensuing months,
+were the engineer Parry, an energetic artilleryman, "extremely active, and
+of strong practical talents," who had travelled in America, and Colonel
+Stanhope (afterwards Lord Harrington) equally with himself devoted to the
+emancipation of Greece, but at variance about the means of achieving it.
+Stanhope, a moral enthusiast of the stamp of Kennedy, beset by the fallacy
+of religious missions, wished to cover the Morea with Wesleyan tracts, and
+liberate the country by the agency of the Press. He had imported a
+converted blacksmith, with a cargo of Bibles, types, and paper, who on
+20_l_. a year, undertook to accomplish the reform. Byron, backed by the
+good sense of Mavrocordatos, proposed to make cartridges of the tracts,
+and small shot of the type; he did not think that the turbulent tribes
+were ripe for freedom of the press, and had begun to regard Republicanism
+itself as a matter of secondary moment. The disputant allies in the common
+cause occupied each a flat of the same small house, the soldier by
+profession was bent on writing the Turks down, the poet on fighting them
+down, holding that "the work of the sword must precede that of the pen,
+and that camps must be the training schools of freedom." Their
+altercations were sometimes fierce--"Despot!" cried Stanhope, "after
+professing liberal principles from boyhood, you when called to act prove
+yourself a Turk." "Radical!" retorted Byron, "if I had held up my finger I
+could have crushed your press,"--but this did not prevent the recognition
+by each of them of the excellent qualities of the other.
+
+Ultimately Stanhope went to Athens, and allied himself with Trelawny and
+Odysseus and the party of the Left. Nothing can be more statesmanlike than
+some of Byron's papers of this and the immediately preceding period;
+nothing more admirable than the spirit which inspires them. He had come
+into the heart of a revolution, exposed to the same perils as those which
+had wrecked the similar movement in Italy. Neither trusting too much nor
+distrusting too much, with a clear head and a good will he set about
+enforcing a series of excellent measures. From first to last he was
+engaged in denouncing dissension, in advocating unity, in doing everything
+that man could do to concentrate and utilize the disorderly elements with
+which he had to work. He occupied himself in repairing fortifications,
+managing ships, restraining licence, promoting courtesy between the foes,
+and regulating the disposal of the sinews of war.
+
+On the morning of the 22nd of January, his last birthday, he came from his
+room to Stanhope's, and said, smiling, "You were complaining that I never
+write any poetry now," and read the familiar stanzas beginning--
+
+ 'Tis time this heart should be unmoved,
+
+and ending--
+
+ Seek out--less often sought than found--
+ A soldier's grave, for thee the best;
+ Then look around, and choose thy ground,
+ And take thy rest.
+
+High thoughts, high resolves; but the brain that was over-tasked, and the
+frame that was outworn, would be tasked and worn little longer. The lamp
+of a life that had burnt too fiercely was flickering to its close. "If we
+are not taken off with the sword," he writes on February 5th, "we are like
+to march off with an ague in this mud basket; and, to conclude with a very
+bad pun, better _martially_ than _marsh-ally_. The dykes of Holland when
+broken down are the deserts of Arabia, in comparison with Mesolonghi." In
+April, when it was too late, Stanhope wrote from Salona, in Phocis,
+imploring him not to sacrifice health, and perhaps life, "in that bog."
+
+Byron's house stood in the midst of the exhalations of a muddy creek, and
+his natural irritability was increased by a more than usually long ascetic
+regimen. From the day of his arrival in Greece he discarded animal food
+and lived mainly on toast, vegetables, and cheese, olives and light wine,
+at the rate of forty paras a day. In spite of his strength of purpose, his
+temper was not always proof against the rapacity and turbulence by which
+he was surrounded. About the middle of February, when the artillery had
+been got into readiness for the attack on Lepanto--the northern, as
+Patras was the southern, gate of the gulf, still in the hands of the
+Turks--the expedition was thrown back by the unexpected rising of the
+Suliotes. These peculiarly Irish Greeks, chronically seditious by nature,
+were on this occasion, as afterwards appeared, stirred up by emissaries of
+Colocatroni, who, though assuming the position of the rival of
+Mavrocordatos, was simply a brigand on a large scale in the Morca.
+Exasperation at this mutiny, and the vexation of having to abandon a
+cherished scheme, seem to have been the immediately provoking causes of a
+violent convulsive fit which, on the evening of the 15th, attacked the
+poet, and endangered his life. Next day he was better, but complained of
+weight in the head; and the doctors applying leeches too close to the
+temporal artery, he was bled till he fainted. And now occurred the last of
+those striking incidents so frequent in his life, in reference to which we
+may quote the joint testimony of two witnesses. Colonel Stanhope writes,
+"Soon after his dreadful paroxysm, when he was lying on his sick-bed, with
+his whole nervous system completely shaken, the mutinous Suliotes, covered
+with dirt and splendid attires, broke into his apartment, brandishing
+their costly arms and loudly demanding their rights. Lord Byron,
+electrified by this unexpected act, seemed to recover from his sickness;
+and the more the Suliotes raged, the more his calm courage triumphed. The
+scene was truly sublime." "It is impossible," says Count Gamba, "to do
+justice to the coolness and magnanimity which he displayed upon every
+trying occasion. Upon trifling occasions he was certainly irritable; but
+the aspect of danger calmed him in an instant, and restored him the free
+exercise of all the powers of his noble nature. A more undaunted man in
+the hour of peril never breathed." A few days later, the riot being
+renewed, the disorderly crew were, on payment of their arrears, finally
+dismissed; but several of the English artificers under Parry left about
+the same time, in fear of their lives.
+
+On the 4th, the last of the long list of Byron's letters to Moore resents,
+with some bitterness, the hasty acceptance of a rumour that he had been
+quietly writing _Don Juan_ in some Ionian island. At the same date he
+writes to Kennedy, "I am not unaware of the precarious state of my health.
+But it is proper I should remain in Greece, and it were better to die
+doing something than nothing." Visions of enlisting Europe and America on
+behalf of the establishment of a new state, that might in course of time
+develope itself over the realm of Alexander, floated and gleamed in his
+fancy; but in his practical daily procedure the poet took as his text the
+motto "festina lente," insisted on solid ground under his feet, and had no
+notion of sailing balloons over the sea. With this view he discouraged
+Stanhope's philanthropic and propagandist paper, the _Telegrapho_, and
+disparaged Dr. Mayor, its Swiss editor, saying, "Of all petty tyrants he
+is one of the pettiest, as are most demagogues." Byron had none of the
+Sclavonic leanings, and almost personal hatred of Ottoman rule, of some of
+our statesmen; but he saw on what side lay the forces and the hopes of the
+future. "I cannot calculate," he said to Gamba, during one of their latest
+rides together, "to what a height Greece may rise. Hitherto it has been a
+subject for the hymns and elegies of fanatics and enthusiasts; but now it
+will draw the attention of the politician.... At present there is little
+difference, in many respects, between Greeks and Turks, nor could there
+be; but the latter must, in the common course of events, decline in power;
+and the former must as inevitably become better.... The English Government
+deceived itself at first in thinking it possible to maintain the Turkish
+Empire in its integrity; but it cannot be done, that unwieldy mass is
+already putrified, and must dissolve. If anything like an equilibrium is
+to be upheld, Greece must be supported." These words have been well
+characterized as prophetic. During this time Byron rallied in health, and
+displayed much of his old spirit, vivacity, and humour, took part in such
+of his favourite amusements as circumstances admitted, fencing, shooting,
+riding, and playing with his pet dog Lion. The last of his recorded
+practical jokes is his rolling about cannon balls, and shaking the
+rafters, to frighten Parry in the room below with the dread of an
+earthquake.
+
+Towards the close of the month, after being solicited to accompany
+Mavrocordatos, to share the governorship of the Morea, he made an
+appointment to meet Colonel Stanhope and Odysseus at Salona, but was
+prevented from keeping it by violent floods which blocked up the
+communication. On the 30th he was presented with the freedom of the city
+of Mesolonghi. On the 3rd of April he intervened to prevent an Italian
+private, guilty of theft, from being flogged by order of some German
+officers. On the 9th, exhilarated by a letter from Mrs. Leigh with good
+accounts of her own and Ada's health, he took a long ride with Gamba and a
+few of the remaining Suliotes, and after being violently heated, and then
+drenched in a heavy shower, persisted in returning home in a boat,
+remarking with a laugh, in answer to a remonstrance, "I should make a
+pretty soldier if I were to care for such a trifle." It soon became
+apparent that he had caught his death. Almost immediately on his return,
+he was seized with shiverings and violent pain. The next day he rose as
+usual, and had his last ride in the olive woods. On the 11th a rheumatic
+fever set in. On the 14th, Bruno's skill being exhausted, it was proposed
+to call Dr. Thomas from Zante, but a hurricane prevented any ship being
+sent. On the 15th, another physician, Mr. Milligen, suggested bleeding to
+allay the fever, but Byron held out against it, quoting Dr. Reid to the
+effect that "less slaughter is effected by the lance than the lancet--that
+minute instrument of mighty mischief;" and saying to Bruno, "If my hour is
+come I shall die, whether I lose my blood or keep it." Next morning
+Milligen induced him to yield, by a suggestion of the possible loss of his
+reason. Throwing out his arm, he cried, "There! you are, I see, a d----d
+set of butchers. Take away as much blood as you like, and have done with
+it." The remedy, repeated on the following day with blistering, was either
+too late or ill-advised. On the 18th he saw more doctors, but was
+manifestly sinking, amid the tears and lamentations of attendants who
+could not understand each other's language. In his last hours his delirium
+bore him to the field of arms. He fancied he was leading the attack on
+Lepanto, and was heard exclaiming, "Forwards! forwards! follow me!" Who is
+not reminded of another death-bed, not remote in time from his, and the
+_Tete d'armee_ of the great Emperor who with the great Poet divided the
+wonder of Europe? The stormy vision passed, and his thoughts reverted
+home. "Go to my sister," he faltered out to Fletcher; "tell her--go to
+Lady Byron--you will see her, and say"--nothing more could be heard but
+broken ejaculations: "Augusta--Ada--my sister, my child. Io lascio qualche
+cosa di caro nel mondo. For the rest, I am content to die." At six on the
+evening of the 18th he uttered his last words, "[Greek: _Dei me nun
+katheudein_];" and on the 19th he passed away.
+
+Never perhaps was there such a national lamentation. By order of
+Mavrocordatos, thirty-seven guns--one for each year of the poet's life--
+were fired from the battery, and answered by the Turks from Patras with an
+exultant volley. All offices, tribunals, and shops were shut, and a
+general mourning for twenty-one days proclaimed. Stanhope wrote, on
+hearing the news, "England has lost her brightest genius--Greece her
+noblest friend;" and Trelawny, on coming to Mesolonghi, heard nothing in
+the streets but "Byron is dead!" like a bell tolling through the silence
+and the gloom. Intending contributors to the cause of Greece turned back
+when they heard the tidings, that seemed to them to mean she was headless.
+Her cities contended for the body, as of old for the birth of a poet.
+Athens wished him to rest in the Temple of Theseus. The funeral service
+was performed at Mesolonghi. But on the 2nd of May the embalmed remains
+left Zante, and on the 29th arrived in the Downs. His relatives applied
+for permission to have them interred in Westminster Abbey, but it was
+refused; and on the 16th July they were conveyed to the village church of
+Hucknall.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI.
+
+
+CHARACTERISTICS, AND PLACE IN LITERATURE.
+
+Lord Jeffrey at the close of a once-famous review quaintly laments: "The
+tuneful quartos of Southey are already little better than lumber, and the
+rich melodies of Keats and Shelley, and the fantastical emphasis of
+Wordsworth, and the plebeian pathos of Crabbe, are melting fast from the
+field of our vision. The novels of Scott have put out his poetry, and the
+blazing star of Byron himself is receding from its place of pride." Of the
+poets of the early part of this century, Lord John Russell thought Byron
+the greatest, then Scott, then Moore. "Such an opinion," wrote a
+_National_ reviewer, in 1860, "is not worth a refutation; we only smile at
+it." Nothing in the history of literature is more curious than the
+shifting of the standard of excellence, which so perplexes criticism. But
+the most remarkable feature of the matter is the frequent return to power
+of the once discarded potentates. Byron is resuming his place: his spirit
+has come again to our atmosphere; and every budding critic, as in 1820, is
+impelled to pronounce a verdict on his genius and character. The present
+times are, in many respects, an aftermath of the first quarter of the
+century, which was an era of revolt, of doubt, of storm. There succeeded
+an era of exhaustion, of quiescence, of reflection. The first years of the
+third quarter saw a revival of turbulence and agitation; and, more than
+our fathers, we are inclined to sympathize with our grandfathers. Macaulay
+has popularized the story of the change of literary dynasty which in our
+island marked the close of the last, and the first two decades of the
+present, hundred years.
+
+The corresponding artistic revolt on the continent was closely connected
+with changes in the political world. The originators of the romantic
+literature in Italy, for the most part, died in Spielberg or in exile. The
+same revolution which levelled the Bastille, and converted Versailles and
+the Trianon--the classic school in stone and terrace--into a moral
+Herculaneum and Pompeii, drove the models of the so-called Augustan ages
+into a museum of antiquarians. In our own country, the movement initiated
+by Chatterton, Cowper, and Burns, was carried out by two classes of great
+writers. They agreed in opposing freedom to formality; in substituting for
+the old, new aims and methods; in preferring a grain of mother wit to a
+peck of clerisy. They broke with the old school, as Protestantism broke
+with the old Church; but, like the sects, they separated again.
+Wordsworth, Southey, and Coleridge, while refusing to acknowledge the
+literary precedents of the past, submitted themselves to a self-imposed
+law. The partialities of their maturity were towards things settled and
+regulated; their favourite virtues, endurance and humility; their
+conformity to established institutions was the basis of a new
+Conservatism. The others were the Radicals of the movement: they
+practically acknowledged no law but their own inspiration. Dissatisfied
+with the existing order, their sympathies were with strong will and
+passion and defiant independence. These found their master-types in
+Shelley and in Byron.
+
+A reaction is always an extreme. Lollards, Puritans, Covenanters, were in
+some respects nauseous antidotes to ecclesiastical corruption. The ruins
+of the Scotch cathedrals and of the French nobility are warnings at once
+against the excess that provokes and the excess that avenges. The revolt
+against the _ancien regime_ in letters made possible the Ode that is the
+high-tide mark of modern English inspiration, but it was parodied in page
+on page of maundering rusticity. Byron saw the danger, but was borne
+headlong by the rapids. Hence the anomalous contrast between his theories
+and his performance. Both Wordsworth and Byron were bitten by Rousseau;
+but the former is, at furthest, a Girondin. The latter, acting like Danton
+on the motto "L'audace, l'audace, toujours l'audace," sighs after _Henri
+Quatre et Gabrielle_. There is more of the spirit of the French Revolution
+in _Don Juan_ than in all the works of the author's contemporaries; but
+his criticism is that of Boileau, and when deliberate is generally absurd.
+He never recognized the meaning of the artistic movement of his age, and
+overvalued those of his works which the Unities helped to destroy. He
+hailed Gifford as his Magnus Apollo, and put Rogers next to Scott in his
+comical pyramid. "Chaucer," he writes, "I think obscene and contemptible."
+He could see no merit in Spenser, preferred Tasso to Milton, and called
+the old English dramatists "mad and turbid mountebanks." In the same
+spirit he writes: "In the time of Pope it was all Horace, now it is all
+Claudian." He saw--what fanatics had begun to deny--that Pope was a great
+writer, and the "angel of reasonableness," the strong common sense of both
+was a link between them; but the expressions he uses during his
+controversy with Bowles look like jests, till we are convinced of his
+earnestness by his anger. "Neither time, nor distance, nor grief, nor age
+can ever diminish my veneration for him who is the great moral poet of all
+times, of all climes, of all feelings, and of all stages of existence....
+Your whole generation are not worth a canto of the _Dunciad_, or anything
+that is his." All the while he was himself writing prose and verse, in
+grasp if not in vigour as far beyond the stretch of Pope, as Pope is in
+"worth and wit and sense" removed above his mimics. The point of the
+paradox is not merely that he deserted, but that he sometimes imitated his
+model, and when he did so, failed. Macaulay's judgment, that "personal
+taste led him to the eighteenth century, thirst for praise to the
+nineteenth," is quite at fault. There can be no doubt that Byron loved
+praise as much as he affected to despise it. His note, on reading the
+_Quarterly_ on his dramas, "I am the most unpopular man in England," is
+like the cry of a child under chastisement; but he had little affinity,
+moral or artistic, with the spirit of our so-called Augustans, and his
+determination to admire them was itself rebellious. Again we are reminded
+of his phrase, "I am of the opposition." His vanity and pride were
+perpetually struggling for the mastery, and though he thirsted for
+popularity he was bent on compelling it; so he warred with the literary
+impulse of which he was the child.
+
+Byron has no relation to the master-minds whose works reflect a nation or
+an era, and who keep their own secrets. His verse and prose is alike
+biographical, and the inequalities of his style are those of his career.
+He lived in a glass case, and could not hide himself by his habit of
+burning blue lights. He was too great to do violence to his nature, which
+was not great enough to be really consistent. It was thus natural for him
+to pose as the spokesman of two ages--as a critic and as an author; and of
+two orders of society--as a peer, and as a poet of revolt. Sincere in
+both, he could never forget the one character in the other. To the last,
+he was an aristocrat in sentiment, a democrat in opinion. "Vulgarity," he
+writes with a pithy half-truth, "is far worse than downright black
+guardism; for the latter comprehends wit, humour, and strong sense at
+times, while the former is a sad abortive attempt at all things,
+signifying nothing." He could never reconcile himself to the English
+radicals; and it has been acutely remarked, that part of his final
+interest in Greece lay in the fact that he found it a country of classic
+memories, "where a man might be the champion of liberty without soiling
+himself in the arena." He owed much of his early influence to the fact of
+his moving in the circles of rank and fashion; but though himself steeped
+in the prejudices of caste, he struck at them at times with fatal force.
+Aristocracy is the individual asserting a vital distinction between itself
+and "the muck o' the world." Byron's heroes all rebel against the
+associative tendency of the nineteenth century; they are self-worshippers
+at war with society; but most of them come to bad ends. He maligned
+himself in those caricatures, and has given more of himself in describing
+one whom with special significance we call a brother poet. "Allen," he
+writes in 1813, "has lent me a quantity of Burns's unpublished letters....
+What an antithetical mind!--tenderness, roughness--delicacy, coarseness--
+sentiment, sensuality--soaring and grovelling--dirt and deity--all mixed
+up in that one compound of inspired clay!" We have only to add to these
+antitheses, in applying them with slight modification to the writer. Byron
+had, on occasion, more self-control than Burns, who yielded to every
+thirst or gust, and could never have lived the life of the soldier at
+Mesolonghi; but partly owing to meanness, partly to a sound instinct, his
+memory has been more severely dealt with. The fact of his being a nobleman
+helped to make him famous, but it also helped to make him hated. No doubt
+it half spoiled him in making him a show; and the circumstance has
+suggested the remark of a humourist, that it is as hard for a lord to be a
+perfect gentleman as for a camel to pass through the needle's eye. But it
+also exposed to the rancours of jealousy a man who had nearly everything
+but domestic happiness to excite that most corroding of literary passions;
+and when he got out of gear he became the quarry of Spenser's "blatant
+beast." On the other hand, Burns was, beneath his disgust at Holy Fairs
+and Willies, sincerely reverential; much of _Don Juan_ would have seemed
+to him "an atheist's laugh," and--a more certain superiority--he was
+absolutely frank.
+
+Byron, like Pope, was given to playing monkey-like tricks, mostly
+harmless, but offensive to their victims. His peace of mind was dependent
+on what people would say of him, to a degree unusual even in the irritable
+race; and when they spoke ill he was, again like Pope, essentially
+vindictive. The _Bards and Reviewers_ beats about, where the lines to
+Atticus transfix with Philoctetes' arrows; but they are due to a like
+impulse. Byron affected to contemn the world; but, say what he would, he
+cared too much for it. He had a genuine love of solitude as an alterative;
+but he could not subsist without society, and, Shelley tells us, wherever
+he went, became the nucleus of it. He sprang up again when flung to the
+earth, but he never attained to the disdain he desired.
+
+We find him at once munificent and careful about money; calmly asleep amid
+a crowd of trembling sailors, yet never going to ride without a nervous
+caution; defying augury, yet seriously disturbed by a gipsy's prattle. He
+could be the most genial of comrades, the most considerate of masters, and
+he secured the devotion of his servants, as of his friends; but he was too
+overbearing to form many equal friendships, and apt to be ungenerous to
+his real rivals. His shifting attitude towards Lady Byron, his wavering
+purposes, his impulsive acts, are a part of the character we trace through
+all his life and work,--a strange mixture of magnanimity and brutality, of
+laughter and tears, consistent in nothing but his passion and his pride,
+yet redeeming all his defects by his graces, and wearing a greatness that
+his errors can only half obscure.
+
+Alternately the idol and the horror of his contemporaries, Byron was,
+during his life, feared and respected as "the grand Napoleon of the realms
+of rhyme." His works were the events of the literary world. The chief
+among them were translated into French, German, Italian, Danish, Polish,
+Russian, Spanish. On the publication of Moore's _Life_, Lord Macaulay had
+no hesitation in referring to Byron as "the most celebrated Englishman of
+the nineteenth century." Nor have we now; but in the interval between
+1840-1870, it was the fashion to talk of him as a sentimentalist, a
+romancer, a shallow wit, a nine days' wonder, a poet for "green unknowing
+youth." It was a reaction, such as leads us to disestablish the heroes of
+our crude imaginations till we learn that to admire nothing is as sure a
+sign of immaturity as to admire everything.
+
+The weariness, if not disgust, induced by a throng of more than usually
+absurd imitators, enabled Carlyle, the poet's successor in literary
+influence (followed with even greater unfairness by Thackeray), more
+effectively to lead the counter-revolt. "In my mind," writes the former,
+in 1839, "Byron has been sinking at an accelerated rate for the last ten
+years, and has now reached a very low level.... His fame has been very
+great, but I do not see how it is to endure; neither does that make him
+great. No genuine productive thought was ever revealed by him to mankind.
+He taught me nothing that I had not again to forgot." The refrain of
+Carlyle's advice during the most active years of his criticism was, "Close
+thy Byron, open thy Goethe." We do so, and find that the refrain of
+Goethe's advice in reference to Byron is--"nocturna versate manu, versate
+diurna." He urged Eckermann to study English that he might read him;
+remarking, "A character of such eminence has never existed before, and
+probably will never come again. The beauty of _Cain_ is such as we shall
+not see a second time in the world.... Byron issues from the sea-waves
+ever fresh. In _Helena_, I could not make use of any man as the
+representative of the modern poetic era except him, who is undoubtedly the
+greatest genius[1] of our century." Again: "Tasso's epic has maintained
+its fame, but Byron is the burning bush, which reduces the cedar of
+Lebanon to ashes.... The English may think of him as they please; this is
+certain, they can show no (living) poet who is comparable to him.... But
+he is too worldly. Contrast _Macbeth_, and _Beppo_, where you are in a
+nefarious empirical world." On Eckermann's doubting "whether there is a
+gain for pure culture in Byron's work," Goethe conclusively replies,
+"There I must contradict you. The audacity and grandeur of Byron must
+certainly tend towards culture. We should take care not to be always
+looking for it in the decidedly pure and moral. Everything that is great
+promotes cultivation, as soon as we are aware of it."
+
+ [Footnote 1: Mr. Arnold wrongly objects to this translation of the
+ German "talent."]
+
+This verdict of the Olympian as against the verdict of the Titan is
+interesting in itself, and as being the verdict of the whole continental
+world of letters. "What," exclaims Castelar, "does Spain not owe to Byron?
+From his mouth come our hopes and fears. He has baptized us with his
+blood. There is no one with whose being some song of his is not woven. His
+life is like a funeral torch over our graves." Mazzini takes up the same
+tune for Italy. Stendhal speaks of Byron's "Apollonic power;" and Sainte
+Beuve writes to the same intent, with some judicious caveats. M. Taine
+concludes his survey of the romantic movement with the remark: "In this
+splendid effort, the greatest are exhausted. One alone--Byron--attains the
+summit. He is so great and so English, that from him alone we shall learn
+more truths of his country and his age than from all the rest together."
+Dr. Elze, ranks the author of _Harold_ and _Juan_ among the four greatest
+English poets, and claims for him the intellectual parentage of Lamartine
+and Musset in France, of Espronceda in Spain, of Puschkin in Russia, with
+some modifications, of Heine in Germany, of Berchet and others in Italy.
+So many voices of so various countries cannot be simply set aside: unless
+we wrap ourselves in an insolent insularism, we are bound at least to ask
+what is the meaning of their concurrent testimony. Foreign judgments can
+manifestly have little weight on matters of form, and not one of the
+above-mentioned critics is sufficiently alive to the egregious
+shortcomings which Byron himself recognized. That he loses almost nothing
+by translation is a compliment to the man, a disparagement to tho artist.
+Very few pages of his verse even aspire to perfection; hardly a stanza
+will bear the minute word-by-word dissection which only brings into
+clearer view the delicate touches of Keats or Tennyson; his pictures with
+a big brush were never meant for the microscope. Here the contrast between
+his theoretic worship of his idol and his own practice reaches a climax.
+If, as he professed to believe, "the best poet is he who best executes his
+work," then he is hardly a poet at all. He is habitually rapid and
+slovenly; an improvisatore on the spot whore his fancy is kindled, writing
+_currente calamo_, and disdaining the "art to blot." "I can never recast
+anything. I am like the tiger; if I miss the first spring, I go grumbling
+back to my jungle." He said to Medwin, "Blank verse is the most difficult,
+because every line must be good." Consequently, his own blank verse is
+always defective--sometimes execrable. No one else--except, perhaps,
+Wordsworth--who could write so well, could also write so ill. This fact in
+Byron's case seems due not to mere carelessness, but to incapacity.
+Something seems to stand behind him, like the slave in the chariot, to
+check the current of his highest thought. The glow of his fancy fades with
+the suddenness of a southern sunset. His best inspirations are spoilt by
+the interruption of incongruous commonplace. He had none of the guardian
+delicacy of taste, or the thirst after completeness, which mark the
+consummate artist. He is more nearly a dwarf Shakespeare than a giant
+Popo. This defect was most mischievous where he was weakest, in his dramas
+and his lyrics, least so where he was strongest, in his mature satires. It
+is almost transmuted into an excellence in the greatest of these, which
+is by design and in detail a temple of incongruity.
+
+If we turn from his manner to his matter, we cannot claim for Byron any
+absolute originality. His sources have been found in Rousseau, Voltaire,
+Chateaubriand, Beaumarchais, Lauzun, Gibbon, Bayle, St. Pierre, Alfieri,
+Casti, Cuvier, La Bruyore, Wieland, Swift, Sterne, Le Sage, Goethe, scraps
+of the classics, and the Book of Job. Absolute originality in a late age
+is only possible to the hermit, the lunatic, or the sensation novelist.
+Byron, like the rovers before Minos, was not ashamed of his piracy. He
+transferred the random prose of his own letters and journals to his
+dramas, and with the same complacency made use of the notes jotted down
+from other writers as he sailed on the Lake of Geneva. But he made them
+his own by smelting the rough ore into bell metal. He brewed a cauldron
+like that of Macbeth's witches, and from it arose the images of crowned
+kings. If he did not bring a new idea into the world, he quadrupled the
+force of existing ideas and scattered them far and wide. Southern critics
+have maintained that he had a southern nature and was in his true element
+on the Lido or under an Andalusian night. Others dwell on the English
+pride that went along with his Italian habits and Greek sympathies. The
+truth is, he had the power of making himself poetically everywhere at
+home; and this, along with the fact of all his writings being perfectly
+intelligible, is the secret of his European influence. He was a citizen of
+the world; because he not only painted the environs, but reflected the
+passions and aspirations of every scene amid which he dwelt.
+
+A disparaging critic has said, "Byron is nothing without his
+descriptions." The remark only emphasizes the fact that his genius was not
+dramatic. All non-dramatic art is concerned with bringing before us
+pictures of the world, the value of which lies half in their truth, half
+in the amount of human interest with which they are invested. To
+scientific accuracy few poets can lay claim, and Byron less than most; but
+the general truth of his descriptions is acknowledged by all who have
+travelled in the same countries. The Greek verses of his first
+pilgrimage,--e.g. the night scene on the Gulf of Arta, many of the
+Albanian sketches, with much of the _Siege of Corinth_ and the _Giaour_
+--have been invariably commended for their vivid realism. Attention has
+been especially directed to the lines in the _Corsair_ beginning--
+
+ But, lo! from high Hymettus to the plain,
+
+as being the veritable voice of one
+
+ Spell-bound, within the clustering Cyclades.
+
+The opening lines of the same canto, transplanted from the _Curse of
+Minerva_, are even more suggestive:--
+
+ Slow sinks, more lovely ere his race be run,
+ Along Morea's hill the setting sun,
+ Not, as in northern climes, obscurely bright,
+ But one unclouded blaze of living light, &c.
+
+In the same way, the later cantos of _Harold_ are steeped in Switzerland
+and in Italy. Byron's genius, it is true, required a stimulus; it could
+not have revelled among the daisies of Chaucer, or pastured by the banks
+of the Doon or the Ouse, or thriven among the Lincolnshire fens. He had a
+sincere, if somewhat exclusive, delight in the storms and crags that
+seemed to respond to his nature and to his age. There is no affectation in
+the expression of the wish, "O that the desert were my dwelling-place!"
+though we know that the writer on the shores of the Mediterranean still
+craved for the gossip of the clubs. It only shows that--
+
+ Two desires toss about
+ The poet's feverish blood;
+ One drives him to the world without,
+ And one to solitude.
+
+Of Byron's two contemporary rivals, Wordsworth had no feverish blood;
+nothing drove him to the world without; consequently his "eyes avert their
+ken from half of human fate," and his influence, though perennial, will
+always be limited. He conquered England from his hills and lakes; but his
+spirit has never crossed the Straits which he thought too narrow. The
+other, with a fever in his veins, calmed it in the sea and in the cloud,
+and, in some degree because of his very excellencies, has failed as yet to
+mark the world at large. The poets' poet, the cynosure of enthusiasts, he
+bore the banner of the forlorn hope; but Byron, with his feet of clay, led
+the ranks. Shelley, as pure a philanthropist as St. Francis or Howard,
+could forget mankind, and, like his Adonais, become one with nature.
+Byron, who professed to hate his fellows, was of them even more than for
+them, and so appealed to them through a broader sympathy, and held them
+with a firmer hand. By virtue of his passion, as well as his power, he was
+enabled to represent the human tragedy in which he played so many parts,
+and to which his external universe of cloudless moons, and vales of
+evergreen, and lightning-riven peaks, are but the various background. He
+set the "anguish, doubt, desire," the whole chaos of his age, to a music
+whose thunder-roll seems to have inspired the opera of _Lohengrin_--a
+music not designed to teach or to satisfy "the budge doctors of the Stoic
+fur," but which will continue to arouse and delight the sons and daughters
+of men.
+
+Madame de Stael said to Byron, at Ouchy, "It does not do to war with the
+world: the world is too strong for the individual." Goethe only gives a
+more philosophic form to this counsel when he remarks of the poet, "He put
+himself into a false position by his assaults on Church and State. His
+discontent ends in negation.... If I call _bad_ bad, what do I gain? But
+if I call _good_ bad, I do mischief." The answer is obvious: as long as
+men call _bad_ good, there is a call for iconoclasts: half the reforms of
+the world have begun in negation. Such comments also point to the common
+error of trying to make men other than they are by lecturing them. This
+scion of a long line of lawless bloods--a Scandinavian Berserker, if there
+ever was one--the literary heir of the Eddas--was specially created to
+wage that war--to smite the conventionality which is the tyrant of England
+with the hammer of Thor, and to sear with the sarcasm of Mephistopheles
+the hollow hypocrisy--sham taste, sham morals, sham religion--of the
+society by which he was surrounded and infected, and which all but
+succeeded in seducing him. But for the ethereal essence,--
+
+ The fount of fiery life
+ Which served for that Titanic strife,
+
+Byron would have been merely a more melodious Moore and a more
+accomplished Brummell. But the caged lion was only half tamed, and his
+continual growls were his redemption. His restlessness was the sign of a
+yet unbroken will. He fell and rose, and fell again; but never gave up the
+struggle that keeps alive, if it does not save, the soul. His greatness as
+well as his weakness lay, in the fact that from boyhood battle was the
+breath of his being. To tell him not to fight, was like telling Wordsworth
+not to reflect, or Shelley not to sing. His instrument is a trumpet of
+challenge; and he lived, as he appropriately died, in the progress of an
+unaccomplished campaign. His work is neither perfect architecture nor fine
+mosaic; but, like that of his intellectual ancestors, the elder
+Elizabethans whom he perversely maligned, it is all animated by the spirit
+of action and of enterprise.
+
+In good portraits his head has a lurid look, as if it had been at a higher
+temperature than that of other men. That high temperature was the source
+of his inspiration, and the secret of a spell which, during his life,
+commanded homage and drew forth love. Mere artists are often mannikins.
+Byron's brilliant though unequal genius was subordinate to the power of
+his personality; he
+
+ Had the elements
+ So mix'd in him, that Nature might stand up
+ And say to all the world--"This was a man."
+
+We may learn much from him still, when we have ceased to disparage, as our
+fathers ceased to idolize, a name in which there is so much warning and so
+much example.
+
+
+
+
+INDEX.
+
+_Abydos, Bride of_
+Adeline (Lady), analysis of female character
+Albrizzi (Countess), salon of
+Ali Pasha, his reception of Byron
+Allegra, Byron's daughter
+Athenians, character of
+Athens
+Aurora Raby, La Guiccioli idealised
+
+Becher's, Rev. J.T., influence on Byron
+_Beppo_
+_Blackwood's Magazine_
+Blessington, Lady
+_Blues, The_
+Boatswain (Byron's dog)
+Bologna
+Boston's _Fourfold State_
+Bowers, Byron's tutor
+Bowles, controversy about Pope
+Bozzaris, Marco, death of
+Brandes, Prof., criticism of Byron's bust
+_British Review, To the Editor of the_
+_Bronze, The Age of_
+Brougham's, Lord, criticism of _Hours of Idleness_
+Brown, Hamilton
+Bruno, Dr.
+Brydges, Sir Egerton, criticism of _Cain_
+Burns
+Burun, an ancestor of Byron
+Butler, Dr., master of Harrow
+Byron, Augusta Ada (the poet's daughter)
+Byron, George Gordon, 6th Lord
+ genealogy;
+ birth;
+ residence at Ballater;
+ school-life;
+ early loves;
+ "first dash into poetry";
+ accession to peerage;
+ Baillie, Dr., medical adviser;
+ at Harrow;
+ coming of age;
+ writes review on Wordsworth;
+ Annesley, residence at;
+ at Cambridge;
+ takes seat in House of Lords;
+ travels;
+ studies Romaic;
+ Armenian;
+ attacks of fever;
+ speeches in House of Lords;
+ writes address on re-opening of Drury Lane Theatre;
+ publishes the _Giaour_;
+ friendship with Sir Walter Scott;
+ marriage;
+ separation from wife;
+ departure from England;
+ friendship with Shelley;
+ in Switzerland;
+ in Italy;
+ life in Venice
+ completes _Childe Harold_
+ life at Ravenna
+ at Pisa
+ relations with Leigh Hunt
+ life in Albaro
+ joins conspiracy in Italy
+ joins movement for liberation of Greece
+ leaves Italy
+ life in Greece
+ last illness and death
+ last words
+ funeral honours
+Byron, Lord
+ allusions in his poetry to his training
+ appreciation of
+ aristocratic sentiments
+ Austria, hatred of, characteristics
+ characteristics of literature in Byron's age
+ cleverness
+ comparison with Shelley and Wordsworth
+ contemporary admiration
+ debts
+ defects of character
+ defects of his poetry
+ descriptive power
+ dislike of professional _litterateurs_
+ dissipations
+ dogmatism
+ early friends
+ financial affairs
+ follower of Pope
+ garrulity
+ idleness
+ knowledge of languages
+ knowledge of Scripture
+ in London society
+ lameness
+ love of mountains
+ melancholy
+ pecuniary profits
+ personal appearance
+ physical endurance
+ poetic character
+ politics
+ reading
+ relations to female sex
+ scholarship
+ Scotch superstition
+ social views
+ solitude
+ sources of Byron's work
+ swimming, feats of
+ tame bear
+ temper
+ theological views
+ verse-romances
+ women
+ estimate of
+ works translated
+Byron, John, Admiral
+Byron, John, of Clayton
+Byron, John (father)
+Byron, Lady (wife)
+Byron, Mrs. (mother)
+Byron, Richard (2nd Lord)
+Byron, Robert de
+Byron, Sir John (1st Lord)
+Byron, Sir Nicholas
+Byron, William (3rd Lord)
+Byron, William (4th Lord)
+Byron, William (5th Lord)
+
+Cadiz, estimate of
+_Cain_
+Cambridge
+Campbell, Thomas
+Carbonari, a secret society
+Carlisle, Lord
+Carlyle
+Castelar
+_Cenci_
+Charlotte, Princess
+Chasles, criticism by
+Chatterton
+Chaucer
+Chaworth, Mary Ann
+Chaworth, Mr.
+Chaworth, Viscount
+Cheltenham
+_Childe Harold_
+ criticism of
+_Chillon, Prisoner of_
+_Christabel_
+_Churchill's Grave_
+Civil Wars
+Clairmont, Miss, intimacy with
+Clare, Lord, friendship with
+Clermont, Mrs., Lady Byron's maid
+Cogni, Margarita, intimacy with
+Coleridge
+Colocatroni, the brigand
+Constantinople
+_Corinth, Siege of_
+_Corsair_
+_Could I remount the River of my Years_
+Cowley
+Cowper
+Crabbe
+_Curse of Minerva_
+
+Dallas, R.C.
+Dante
+D'Arcy, Amelia (Countess Conyers)
+_Darkness_
+Davies, Scrope
+Davy, Sir H.
+_Deformed Transformed_
+_Don Juan_
+ criticism of
+Doomsday Book
+Dramas (Byron's)
+_Dream, The_
+Drury, Dr. Joseph
+Drury, Henry
+Drury Lane Theatre
+Drury, Mark
+Dryden
+Duff, Mary, intimacy with
+Dulwich
+
+Eddlestone, the chorister
+_Edinburgh Review_
+Ekenhead, Lieutenant
+Eldon, Lord
+Elgin, Lord
+Elze
+England's vice of hypocrisy
+_English Bards and Scotch Reviewers_
+English character
+English literature
+
+_Faery Queene_ (Spenser's)
+Falkland, Lord
+_Faust_, influence of, on Byron
+Ferrara
+Fletcher (valet)
+Florence
+_Foscari, The Two_
+_Francesca of Rimini_
+Frere
+
+Galt
+Gamba
+Gell
+Geneva
+Genoa
+George, Prince of Denmark
+George III.
+_Giaour_
+Gibbon
+Gibraltar
+Gifford
+_Glenarvon_ (Lady Caroline Lamb's novel)
+Glennie, Dr.
+Goethe
+Gray, May, her influence over Byron
+Gray (poet)
+Greece
+Grindelwald
+Guiccioli
+
+Hailstone, Prof.
+Hanson, Mr., solicitor
+Harness, a school-fellow
+Harrogate, trip to
+Harrow
+Hawthorne
+_Heaven and Earth_
+Heber, Bishop
+_Hebrew Melodies_
+_Hints from Horace_
+Hiron, a Cambridge tradesman
+Hobhouse
+Hodgson, Rev. F.
+Holderness, Earl of
+Holland, Lord
+Hoppner
+_Hours of Idleness_
+Howard, Hon. F.
+Howitt, William
+Hucknall Torkard, church
+_Hudibras_
+Hunt, John
+Hunt, Leigh
+
+Ilissus
+Ilium
+_Island, The_
+Italy
+Ithaca
+
+Jackson, Mr., a pugilist
+Janina
+Jeffrey
+Jones (tutor)
+Journal (Byron's)
+Juliet, story of
+Jungfrau
+_Juvenilia_
+
+Keats
+Kemble, Frances Ann, memoirs of
+Kennedy, Dr.
+Kharyati
+Kinnaird, Douglas
+Kirkby Mallory
+
+_Lalla Rookh_
+Lamb, Lady Caroline
+La Mira
+_Landlord, Tales of a_
+Landor
+Lanfranchi
+_Lara_
+Lausanne
+Lavender, a quack
+Lee, Harriet
+Leeds, Duke of
+Leghorn
+Leigh, Colonel
+Leigh, Mrs. (poet's sister Augusta)
+Loman, Lake
+Lepanto
+Lewis
+_Liberal_, the
+Lido
+Lion (pet dog)
+Lisbon
+Lisle, Rouget de
+Loch Leven
+Locke
+Lockhart
+London
+Londonderry, Lord
+Long, Edward Noel
+Longman
+Loughborough
+Lucca
+Lucifer
+Lushington, Dr.
+
+Macaulay
+Mackenzie (the Man of Feeling)
+Mafra
+Magellan, Straits of
+Mallet
+Malta
+Mandeville, Sir John
+_Manfred_
+ criticism of
+Mansel, Dr. Lort
+Marathon
+Marilyn, Mrs.
+_Marina Faliero_
+ criticism of
+Marius
+Marlowe
+Martineau, Miss
+Matlock
+Matthews, C.S.
+Mavrocordatos, Prince Alexander
+Mayor, Dr.
+_Mazeppa_
+Mazzini
+Medora (daughter of Mrs. Leigh)
+Medwin, Captain
+Meister, Wilhelm
+Melbourne
+Memoirs (Byron's)
+Mesolonghi
+Milan
+Milbanke, Sir Ralph
+Milligen (a physician)
+Milton
+Moore
+Morea
+Morgan, Lady
+_Morgantc Maggiore_
+Murray, Joe (butler)
+Murray, John
+Musters
+
+Napier, Colonel
+Naples
+Napoleon
+Newark
+Newbury, battle of
+Nowstead
+Noel, Lady
+Norton, Mrs.
+_Nottingham_
+
+Odysseus
+Ossington
+Oxford
+
+Paganini
+_Parisina_
+Parker, Margaret, intimacy with
+Parr, Dr.
+Parry (engineer)
+Parthenon
+Paterson (a tutor)
+Patras
+Peel, Sir Robert
+Peloponnesus
+Pentelicus
+Persia
+Petrarch
+Philopoemen
+Pigot
+Pisa
+Plato's Glaucus
+_Pleasures of Hope_
+Po (river)
+Polidori
+Pope
+Porson, 39
+Power, Miss
+_Prometheus_
+Pulci
+
+_Quarterly Review_
+
+_Rambler_
+Raphael
+Ravenna
+Regent, the
+Regillus
+Reid, Dr.
+_Rejected Addresses_
+Revolution, the French
+Rhine
+Rhoetian hill
+Richter
+Robinson, Crabb
+Rochdale
+Rochester
+Rogers, Samuel, (poet)
+Rogers (tutor)
+Roman Catholic Emancipation, speech on behalf of
+Roman Catholic religion
+Rome
+Ross (a tutor)
+Rossina
+Rousseau
+Rubens
+Rushton, Robert
+Ruskin
+Russell, Lord John
+Russia
+Ruthyn, Lord Grey de
+
+Sainte Beuve
+Santa Croce
+_Saragassa, Maid of_
+Sardanapalus
+_Saturday Review_
+Schlegel, F.
+Scotland, allusions to
+Scott, Sir Walter
+Seaham
+Segati, Mariana, intimacy with
+Seville
+Shakespeare
+Shelley
+Shelley, Mrs.
+Shepherd, Mrs., letter of
+Sheridan
+Siddons, Mrs.
+Sinclair, George, friend of Byron
+Sligo, Marquis of
+Smith, Mrs. Spencer ("Florence")
+Smith, Sir Henry
+Smyrna
+Socrates
+Soraete
+Southey
+Southwell
+Spain
+Spectator
+Spencer, Earl
+Spenser
+Spielberg
+Spinoza
+Stael, Madame de
+Stanhope, Colonel
+Stanhope, Lady Hester
+Staubbach
+Stendhal
+Stephen, Leslie
+Stromboli
+Suliotes
+Swift
+Swinstead
+Switzerland
+
+Taafe
+Taine
+Tasso
+Tavell (a tutor)
+_Telegrapho_(newspaper)
+Tennant
+Tennyson
+Tepaleni
+Thackeray
+Thebes
+Theresa (Maid of Athens)
+Thorwaldsen
+Tickhill
+Titian
+Trelawny
+Turkey
+Tusculum
+
+University training
+
+_Vampire, The_
+Vanessa
+Vathi
+Venice
+Verona
+"Victory," the
+_Vision of Judgment_
+Voltaire
+
+"Wager," the
+_Waltz, The,_
+Washington
+Waterloo
+Watkins, Dr. John
+Wellington
+Wengern
+_Werner_
+West (artist)
+Westminster Abbey
+Wildman
+Williams, Captain
+Wingfield, John
+Woodhouselee, Lord
+Wordsworth
+_World_
+Wycliffe
+
+York
+Yussuf Pasha
+
+Zante
+Zitza
+
+
+THE END.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Byron, by John Nichol
+
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