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1819

Mazeppa
and
Ode to Venice
published in June,
Don Juan I-II
in July, anonymously, and then pirated, to Murray’s distress. Works on
Don Juan III
. All four cantos of
Childe

Harold’s Pilgrimage
published together. Venice Carnival, etc. Byron visits the Guicciolis in Ravenna and Bologna; begins affair with Teresa and at her request writes
The Prophecy of Dante
; gives his memoirs to Thomas Moore in October. Teresa’s husband and her father, Count Gamba, try to end her liaison with Byron; in November, she returns to Ravenna with her husband. On Christmas Eve Byron joins Teresa at Ravenna.

Wordsworth’s
Peter Bell
and
The Waggoner
, Polidori’s
The Vampyre
, Scott’s
The Heart of Mid-Lothian
and Hemans’s
Tales and Historical Scenes
published. Scathing review of
The Revolt of Islam
in the
Quarterly
, with a vicious attack on Shelley’s character.

‘Peterloo massacre’ in August; Six Acts passed in December; birth of Queen Victoria. Shelley writes
The Mask of Anarch
.

1820

Byron and Allegra live with Teresa and her husband; Byron’s and Teresa’s liaison continues. Byron becomes involved in the Italian Revolution against Austrian rule (the Carbonari movement) through Teresa’s brother. Teresa is officially separated from her husband in July and goes to live with her father; Byron visits frequently. Sends Allegra to live in the country. Working on
Don Juan III–V
, translates ‘Francesca of Rimini’ from Dante’s
Inferno
, Canto V.

Death of George III; the Regent becomes George IV.

Dissolution of Parliament, Cato Street Conspiracy in England. Queen Caroline tried for adultery; Byron involved in seeking Italian witnesses for her.

Royalist reactions throughout Europe; revolution in Spain and Portugal.

Murray publishes an eight-volume edition of Byron’s poems (1818–20). Shelley’s
Swellfoot the Tyrant
published and suppressed; his
Prometheus Unbound and Other Poems, The Cenci
, Hemans’s
The Sceptic
, Clare’s
Poems Descriptive of Rural Life
, Wordsworth’s
Memorials of a Tour on the Continent
and
The River Duddon
, and Keats’s
Lamia
volume published. The
London Magazine
and
John Bull
founded.

1821

Byron begins his journal.
Marino Faliero
and
The Prophecy of Dante
published in April; when
Don Juan III–V
is published in August, Murray’s premises are mobbed by booksellers’ messengers;
Sardanapalus, The Two Foscari
and
Cain
are published together in December. After Southey publishes
A Vision of Judgement
with its attack on the Satanic school, Byron retaliates with
The Vision of Judgment
. Sends Murray
The Blues
in August.
Marino Faliero
flops on the London stage.

The Gambas (Teresa’s family) are expelled from Romagna in July and banished to Pisa; Byron and the Gambas join the Shelleys and others of the ‘Pisan circle’ by November. Allegra is sent to a convent school.

Deaths of Napoleon, Queen Caroline and Keats (in Rome, February); Shelley’s
Adonais
hooted at in Blackwood’s; Baillie’s
Metrical Legends
published. The ‘Bowles controversy’ in England: Byron writes two letters in defence of Pope and attacks the Lake poets and the Cockneys. Lockhart’s unsigned pamphlet,
John Bull’s Letter to the Right Hon. Lord Byron
published.

Greek War of Liberation (from the Ottoman Empire) begins.

1822

Byron publishes
A Letter to
[John Murray]
on the Rev. W. C. Bowles’s Strictures on… Pope
; resumes
Don Juan
, attenuates his relationship with Murray and makes terms with the radical publisher, John Hunt. Southey attacks Byron in February in the conservative
Courier
. Leigh Hunt arrives with his large family in Pisa in July to join Byron and Shelley in publishing the
Liberal
. The first issue (15 October) includes Byron’s ‘Letter to the Editor of “My Grandmother’s Review” ’ and
The Vision of Judgment
, the latter resulting in hostile reviews and John Hunt’s prosecution. Murray publishes
Werner
in November.

Allegra dies of typhus in April; Lady Noel, Annabella’s mother, dies; Byron takes the name ‘Noel Byron’ and shares the estate, nearly doubling his income. Shelley leaves for Lerici in April, drowns in a boating accident in July. Byron, Mary Shelley and the Hunts move to Genoa in September. Friction with the Hunts.

Shelley’s
Hellas
published in February; also published, De Quincey’s
Confessions of an English Opium Eater
. Lord Castlereagh, the Foreign Secretary, commits suicide in August.

1823

The
Liberal
publishes
Heaven and Earth
in January and
The Blues
in April.
The Age of Bronze
also published in April,
The Island
in June,
Don Juan
(now published by John Hunt)
VI-VIII
in July,
IX-XI
in August, and
XII-XIV
in December

Byron is elected a member of the Greek Committee in London; quarrels with the Hunts and Mary Shelley; meets Countess Blessington; becomes involved in the Revolution and sails for Greece in July, arriving at Missolonghi at the end of the year; agrees to lend the Greek Government £4,000.

Mary Shelley’s
Valperga
and Caroline Lamb’s
Ada Reis: A Tale
published.

France and Spain at war.

1824

Byron in Greece at Missolonghi, financing the army. Writes verses on thirty-sixth birthday.
The Deformed Transformed
published in February,
Don Juan XV-XVI
in March.

The Revolution is in disarray. Byron’s health deteriorates, and he dies at Missolonghi in April; his body is taken to England, where he is buried in July, with his ancestors near Newstead, having been refused interment at Westminster Abbey. His memoirs are destroyed.

Correspondence of Lord Byron with a Friend
, edited by R.C. Dallas, is suppressed before it could be published; Dallas does publish
Recollections of Lord Byron
(1808–14), and Thomas Medwin publishes
Journal of the Conversations of Lord Byron at Pisa
. Also published: L.E.L.’s (Laetitia Landon)
The Improvisatrice
; Shelley’s
Posthumous Poems
, including ‘Julian and Maddalo’, published in England by John Hunt and associates but quickly suppressed by Shelley’s father.

1825

Dallas’s
Correspondence
published in Paris. Murray produces an eight-volume edition of Byron’s poetry, and Hazlitt’s essay on ‘Lord Byron’ appears in
The Spirit of the Age.

1826

Don Juan
(Cantos I-XVI) published in two volumes.

1828

Leigh Hunt’s
Lord Byron and Some of His Contemporaries
published.

1830

Thomas Moore’s
Letters and Journals of Lord Byron: With Notices of His Life
(two volumes) and John Galt’s
The Life of Lord Byron
published.

1831

Thomas Macaulay’s extensive review of Moore’s
Byron
published in the
Edinburgh Review
(June).

1832–3

3
Conversations of Lord Byron with the Countess of Blessington
published in the
New Monthly Magazine
(July 1832-December 1833).

1832–4

John Murray publishes a seventeen-volume edition of
The Works of Lord Byron: With His Letters and Journals, and His Life, by Thomas Moore, Esq.

FURTHER READING

THE ROMANTIC ERA

Brown, Marshall (ed.),
The Cambridge History of Literary Criticism
, Vol. 5:
Romanticism
(Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2000).

Butler, Marilyn,
Romantics, Rebels, and Reactionaries: English Literature and Its Background, 1760–1830
(Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1982).

Gaull, Marilyn,
English Romanticism, The Human Context
(Norton, 1988).

Renwick, W. L.,
English Literature: 1789–1815
, and Ian Jack,
English Literature: 1815–1832
(Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1963). Both in John Buxton and Norman Davis (eds.),
Oxford History of English Literature
.

Wolfson, Susan, and Peter Manning (eds.),
The Romantics and Their Contemporaries,
Vol. 2a of David Damrosch (ed.),
The Longman Anthology of British Literature,
2nd edn (New York: Longman Publishers, 2003, 3rd edition, 2006).

BIOGRAPHIES AND MEMOIRS

Blessington, Lady,
Conversations of Lord Byron
(1834), ed. Ernest J. Lovell, Jr. (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1969). In Genoa, Italy, in 1823, just before he left for Greece.

Eisler, Benita,
Byron: Child of Passion, Fool of Fame
(New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1999). Sensationalizing.

Franklin, Caroline,
Byron: A Literary Life
(London: Palgrave, 2000). The forceful personality set amid readers’ reactions, social and historical situations (travel, theatre culture, expatriatism, press censorship and libel trials).

Garrett, Martin,
George Gordon, Lord Byron
, in the British Library Writers’ Lives series (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2000). Short, readable narration, beautiful illustrations.

Grosskurth, Phyllis,
Byron: The Flawed Angel
(Boston, Mass.: Houghton Mifflin, 1997). Psychoanalytic.

Hunt, Leigh,
Lord Byron and Some of His Contemporaries
. (London: Henry Colburn, 1828). By one who knew him for the last ten years of his life – gossipy, biased, controversial.

Lovell, Jr., Ernest J. (ed.),
His Very Self and Voice
:
Collected Conversations of Lord Byron
(New York and London: Macmillan, 1954). A compendium from a range of sources.

MacCarthy, Fiona,
Byron
:
Life and Legend
(London: John Murray, 2002). Some new material; gorgeous plates.

Marchand, Leslie A.,
Byron: A Biography,
3 vols., (New York/ London: Knopf, 1957/John Murray, 1958). Detailed chronology; abridged and revised in one volume as
Byron: A Portrait,
(Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1970).

Medwin, Thomas,
Conversations of Lord Byron: Noted During a Residence with His Lordship at Pisa, in the Years 1821 and 1822
(1824); ed. Ernest, J. Lovell Jr. (Princeton: Princeton: University Press, 1966). The first of this genre.

Moore, Thomas,
Letters and Journals of Lord Byron With Notices of His Life,
2 vols. (London: John Murray, 1830); the first official biography, much reprinted in the nineteenth century. Online at:
Click here
Page, Norman (ed.),
Byron: Interviews and Recollections
(New York: Humanities Press, 1985).

Quennell, Peter,
Byron: The Years of Fame and Byron in Italy
(New York: Viking Press 1935 and 1941)

Trelawny, Edward G.,
Recollections of the Last Days of Shelley and Byron
(1858; new edn, 1878), ed. J. E. Morpurgo (New York: Philosophical Library, 1952). A rakish acquaintance.

EDITIONS OF POETRY, LETTERS AND PROSE

Coleridge, Ernest Hartley (ed.),
The Works of Lord Byron: Poetry
, 7 vols. (London: John Murray, 1898–1904); Prothero, Rowland E. (ed.),
The Works of Lord Byron: Letters and Journals
, 6 vols.
(London: John Murray, 1898–1904). Though the transcriptions of the latter have been superseded by Leslie Marchand’s edition, the notes remain invaluable.

McGann, Jerome J. (ed.),
Lord Byron: The Complete Poetical Works,
7 vols. (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1980–93). Vol. VI (drama), co-edited with Barry Weller. See also his
Byron
, one-volume selection of poetry (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1986). A standard edition.

Marchand, Leslie A. (ed.),
Byron’s Letters and Journals
, 12 vols. (Cambridge, Mass./London: Harvard University Press/John Murray, 1973–82). In one volume, as
Selected Letters and Journals
(Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 1982). The standard edition for critical and scholarly citation.

Nicholson, Andrew (ed.),
Lord Byron: The Complete Miscellaneous Prose
(Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1991). The standard edition.

Page, Frederick (ed.),
Byron: Poetical Works
, revised John Jump, (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1970). Complete, one volume; a standard edition.

Reiman, Donald H. (gen. ed.),
Manuscripts of the Younger Romantics
(New York and London: Garland, 1985– ). Photographic plates, transcriptions, notes and introductions: several volumes on Byron’s works. Individual volumes ed. T. A. J. Burnett, Peter Cochran, Cheryl Guiliano, David Erdman and David Worrall, Alice Levine and Jerome McGann, and Andrew Nicholson.

Steffan, T. G., E. Steffan and W. W. Pratt (eds.),
Don Juan
(London: Penguin Classics, 1986; 2004). A standard edition.

BOOK: Selected Poems
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