
| The Texts of the Poems A Note on the Texts From Hours of Idleness (1807) To M.S.G. To a Beautiful Quaker To a Lady Who Presented to the Author a Lock of Hair Braided with His Own, and Appointed at a Night in December to Meet Him in the Garden On a Distant View of the Village and School of Harrow on the Hill, 1806 I Would I Were a Careless Child To Edward Noel Long, Esq. From Hebrew Melodies (1815) She Walks in Beauty The Harp the Monarch Minstrel Swept My Soul Is Dark The Destruction of Sennacherib Other Lyrics Written After Swimming from Sestos to Abydos To Thyrza Epistle to Augusta Darkness So We’ll Go No More A-Roving Versicles On This Day I Complete My Thirty-Six Year Childe Harold’s Pilgrimage Canto the First (1812) Canto the Third (1816) Canto the Fourth (verses 1-10, 164-86) (1818) The Giaour (1812) The Prisoner of Chillon (1816) Manfred (1817) The Vision of Judgment (1822) Don Juan (1819–24) Fragment on the Back of the Ms. of Canto the First Dedication Canto the First Canto the Second (verses CXLI-CCXVI) Canto the Fifth Canto the Ninth Canto the Sixteenth Byron’s Letter and Journals To His Mother, May 1, 1803 To Francis Hodgson, November 3, 1808 To William Harness, March 18, 1809 To Henry Drury, May 3, 1810 To Francis Hodgson, September 3, 1811 To John Murray, September 5, 1811 To Lady Caroline Lamb, May 1, 1812 From His Journal, November 1813–April 1814 To Lady Melbourne, January 7, 1815 To Lady Byron, February 8, 1816 To John Murray, September 15, 1817 To Thomas Moore, February 2, 1818 To John Cam Hobhouse and the Honorable Douglas Kinnaird, January 19, 1819 To the Honorable Douglas Kinnaird, October 26, 1819 From His "Detached Thoughts," October 1821 to May 1822 To the Honorable Augusta Leigh, September 12, 1823 To Mr. Mayer, English Consul at Prevesa, undated Criticism Bergen Evans, Lord Byron’s Pilgrimage John D. Jump, Byron: The Historical Context Michael G. Cooke, Byron and the Romantic Lyric Francis Berry, The Poet of Childe Harold Robert F. Gleckner, The Giaour as Experimental Narrative James R. Thompson, Byron’s Plays and Don Juan Frank D. McConnell, Byron as Antipoet Leslie A. Marchand, Byron in the Twentieth Century E.D. Hirsch, Jr., Byron and the Terrestrial Paradise Images of Byron Francis Jeffrey, From the Edinburgh Review (April 1814) Lady Caroline Lamb, From Glenarvon (1816) Thomas Love Peacock, From Nightmare Abbey (1818) Ro bert Southey, From A Vision of Judgment (1821) Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, From Conversations with Eckermann (1822–1832) Stendhal, Memories of Lord Byron (1829) Thomas Carlyle, From Sartor Resartus (1838) Gustave Flaubert, From His Letters (1838 and 1845) Ralph Waldo Emerson, Thoughts on Modern Literature (1840) Harriet Beecher Stowe, From Uncle Tom’s Cabin (1850) Matthew Arnold, [Byron] (1881) Oscar Wilde, From The Soul of Man Under Socialism (1891) George Bernard Shaw, Dedicatory Letter to Man and Superman (1903) James Joyce From A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man (1916) Virginia Woolf, From A Writer’s Diary (Wednesday, August 7, 1918) William Butler Yeats, From A Vision (1922) T.E. Lawrence, From Seven Pillars of Wisdom (1926) Charles Du Bos, Byron and the Need of Fatality (1931) Mario Praz, From The Romantic Agony (1933) T.S. Eliot, Byron (1937) Albert Camus, From The Rebel (1951) Vladimir Nabakov, From Lolita (1955) W.H. Auden, Byron: The Making of a Comic Poet (1966) Angus Wilson, Evil in the English Novel (1967) Anthony Lewis, At Last Lord Byron Gets Place in Poet’s Corner in Westminster (1968) Chronology Selected Bibliography |
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