“The Poet and the Vampyre: The Curse of Byron and the Birth of Literature's Greatest Monsters,” by Andrew McConnell Stott On the opening pages of Andrew McConnell Stott's The Poet and the Vampyre, ...
Too hot to handle: Lord Byron (left) embarked on a series of affairs all over Europe. Images / Supplied / Getty Images Two hundred years ago, on April 19, 1824, Lord Byron died unexpectedly in Greece.
Andrew Stauffer’s new biography, Byron: A Life in Ten Letters, which starts each chapter with a letter from the poet’s own unsettled pen (and quotes empathetically from women’s letters, too), is ...
Often dubbed as one of the first modern celebrities, Lord Byron was a leading figures of the Romantic movement, a literary and cultural movement that arose in the late 18th Century. Romanticism ...
In March 1812, the poet Lord Byron "woke one morning" to find himself famous. He was 24 years old, and the occasion was the publication that month in London of the first two cantos of his verse ...
George Gordon Byron, sixth baron of that title, is certainly a poet who stands in that rarefied company, though it's hard to believe that even the linguistic laurels represented by the now commonplace ...
LORD Byron, the scandalous and wild romantic poet who regularly denounced Scotland in reaction to his strict Calvinist upbringing, yearned for the land of his childhood in the last days of his life.
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