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Lord Byron
Mad, bad and dangerous to know
He was a giant of English Romanticism, a supremely gifted poet and satirist, and a national hero in
George Gordon Noel Byron was born in 1788 into a family of rapidly crumbling nobility. His early years were far removed from the hard-living, hard-loving lifestyle with which he has become synonymous. A lame foot, the lack of any father figure, and the contempt of his aristocratic family for his mother all made the young Byron a meek and overly sensitive boy.
After the death of his granduncle in 1798, Byron inherited his title and estate, becoming the 6thBaron Byron at the tender age of 10. After graduating from Harrow, he went up to
Byron had already been writing for several years by the time he arrived at
He had not planned to return to
After leaving
Byron capitalised on his new-found fame. His list of paramours was lengthy and legendary. His affairs with Lady Caroline Lamb and Lady Oxford shocked members of
In 1815, Byron decided it was time to settle down, and married Anna Milbanke. However, as with so many of today’s celebrity marriages, the union quickly unravelled, and she left him within a year. After the divorce, Byron once again found himself an societal outcast.
Byron had had enough of uptight
Free from the constraints of
Byron in
Byron left
While planning an attack on the Turkish-held fortress of Lepanto in early 1824, Byron fell ill, and ultimately succumbed to malarial fever on 19 April.
Memorial services for Byron were held all over
Byron lives on not only through his work, but through his archetype of the Byronic hero - brooding, mysterious, self-destructive – featured in many of his works. The Byronic hero continues to be an irresistible figure: popular examples include James Dean, Scarlett O’Hara and Nirvana lead singer Kurt Cobain, who ended his suicide note with a very Byronesque quote: “It’s better to burn out than to fade away.”
Downing College alumnus and illustrator Quentin Blake drew a new image of Byron as part of his Cambridge 800: An Informal Panorama. Click here to see the rest of the images.
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