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Byron: Poems (Everyman's Library Pocket Poets Series)

Product ID : 18959378


Galleon Product ID 18959378
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About Byron: Poems

Review Damaetas The Destruction Of Sennacherib Don Juan: Canto 1 Don Juan: Dedication [or, Invocation] The Dream Epigram On My Wedding Day: To Penelope Epistle To Mr. Murray Fragment Fragment, On The Back Of The Poet's Ms. Of Canto I John Keats (1) Lines Written On A Blank Lead Of 'the Pleasures Of Memory' Martial, Lib. I, Epig. I My Soul Is Dark Oh! Weep For Those On Finding A Fan On Leaving Newstead Abbey On My Thirty-third Birthday She Walks In Beauty A Sketch Song Stanzas For Music (3) Stanzas: 115-160 Stanzas: 169-216 To The Countess Of Blessington To Thomas Moore (1) To Thyrza (2) Vision Of Belshazzar The Vision Of Judgement The Wild Gazelle The Chain I Gave -- Table of Poems from Poem Finder® Product Description To the nineteenth-century reader, George Gordon, Lord Byron (1788-1824), was the archetype of the Romantic literary hero, a figure admired and emulated as much for the revolutionary panache with which he lived his life as the brio and allure of his verse. Our century has seen him more clearly as a poet whose intellectual toughness, satiric gifts, and utter inability to be boring have made him one of the great comic spirits in our literature. From the Back Cover To the nineteenth-century reader, George Gordon, Lord Byron (1788-1824), was the archetype of the Romantic literary hero, a figure admired and emulated as much for the revolutionary panache with which he lived his life as the brio and allure of his verse. Our century has seen him more clearly as a poet whose intellectual toughness, satiric gifts, and utter inability to be boring have made him one of the great comic spirits in our literature. About the Author To the nineteenth-century reader, George Gordon Byron (1788-1824), was the archetype of the Romantic literary hero, a figure admired and emulated as much for the revolutionary panache with which he lived his life as the brio and allure of his verse. Our century has seen him more clearly as a poet whose intellectual toughness, satiric gifts, and utter inability to be boring have made him one of the great comic spirits in our literature.