Why did my teachers devote more class time to John Greenleaf Whittier and James Russell Lowell – American exemplars of the Age of Thrice-Named Writers -- than to Lord Byron? After more than half a century, I can only speculate. Literary patriotism? We spent a lot of time reading such certified American products as Ralph Waldo Emerson (not Thoreau), William Cullen Bryant, Henry Wadsworth Longfellow and "The Man Without a Country." In retrospect I can see this reading list had likely been in place for nearly a century. We dabbled in the English Romantic poets, especially Keats and Wordsworth, but no Byron. Was the taint of scandal still attached to his name? I’m not dismissing Whittier & Co. Most are minor writers in a young country. I want to address an imbalance.
My late father-in-law left
me a small library of books, including those he had won as prizes while a
student at St. Andrew’s College in Aurora, Ontario. Among them is the Oxford
edition of The Poetical Works of Lord Byron, the 1952 reprint, which he
was awarded four years later. I’m using it to sample Byron, reading among his
poems experimentally. I did something similar a few years ago with Robert
Browning, another void in my education.
I do love Don Juan
(1819-24), especially for its wit, occasional vulgarity and inspired rhymes. He is the inheritor of Alexander Pope’s gift. Take Canto I, Stanza 22:
"'T is pity learnéd virgins
ever wed
With persons of no sort of
education,
Or gentlemen, who, though
well born and bred,
Grow tired of scientific
conversation:
I don’t choose to say much
upon this head,
I’m a plain man, and in a
single station,
But — Oh! ye lords of
ladies intellectual,
Inform us truly, have they
not hen-peck’d you all?”
In Canto III, Stanza 88,
Byron writes thoughtfully, colloquially, racily :
“But words are things; and
a small drop of ink,
Falling, like dew, upon a
thought, produces
That which makes
thousands, perhaps millions, think;
’T is strange, the
shortest letter which man uses
Instead of speech, may
form a lasting link
Of ages; to what straits
old Time reduces
Frail man, when paper —
even a rag like this,
Survives himself, his
tomb, and all that’s his.”
In a 2002 essay titled “My Roommate Lord Byron,” the Byronic poet Tom Disch writes:
“It would have pleased Lord Byron to know that, having been the most renowned, imitated, and execrated of the Major Romantic Poets, he is now, almost two centuries later, the least honored, the most ignored and deplored of that select few. For he thrived on giving offense. He was a sexy, swaggering contrarian whose wisecrack answer to the earnest inquiry of Concerned Virtue, ‘What are you rebelling against?,’ would have been the same as Marlon Brando’s: 'What have ya got?’”
I should have read Byron decades ago but I wouldn’t have recognized him as a lineal
descendent of Dryden and Pope.
Don Juan really is a fine poem.
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