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  • When the Edinburgh Review criticised [[Lord Byron|Byron]]'s unremarkable first collection ''Hours of Idleness'', the retort c
    8 KB (1,246 words) - 07:32, 20 April 2024
  • ...or money." <ref>Boswell</ref> Within 50 years he was to be disproved by [[Lord Byron|Byron]], who initially thought it beneath his dignity to accept money for h
    3 KB (493 words) - 14:47, 24 January 2014
  • * Lord Byron
    5 KB (699 words) - 04:28, 1 October 2013
  • ...of Lovelace, an enthusiatic amateur mathematician and daughter of the poet Lord Byron. Ada's translated article, including her own extensive notes about her und
    2 KB (313 words) - 07:27, 14 February 2016
  • ...t]], and some people believed that this led to Keats's premature death. [[Lord Byron|Byron]] wrote "'Tis strange the mind, that very fiery particle/Should let i
    5 KB (725 words) - 16:00, 1 July 2022
  • ...aire Clairmont who was staying there and who used their presence to lure [[Lord Byron]] to Geneva. Claire and Byron had had an affair, but he had then lost inter
    8 KB (1,170 words) - 15:09, 11 December 2015
  • ...in his self-centredness in that of [[Percy Bysshe Shelley|Shelley]] and [[Lord Byron|Byron]] (a hero of his boyhood). ...use of Lords]] in 1884. (This was the first peerage for literature.<ref>[[Lord Byron]], among other lordly poets, inherited his title. Tennyson's title is also
    7 KB (1,162 words) - 16:06, 9 January 2021
  • Claire was fascinated from afar by George Gordon Lord Byron and did everything to meet him. Byron was planning a trip to Switzerland an In January 1817, Claire gave birth to Lord Byron’s daughter Allegra.
    15 KB (2,538 words) - 16:08, 12 December 2015
  • ...tead of Sir Walter (and was irritated to find an article with the title of Lord Byron). Personally, I don't think the form of the name matters much, as long as ...s almost ALWAYS referred to with the "Sir", at least here in the States, [[Lord Byron]] seems a trickier case to me. If you said to a reasonably educated person,
    15 KB (2,398 words) - 12:56, 29 November 2020
  • ...h the following verse, a parody of ''The Destruction of Sennacherib'' by [[Lord Byron]]:
    9 KB (1,345 words) - 15:20, 8 April 2023
  • ...gazine <i>[[Punch]]</i> responded to the event by publishing a parody of [[Lord Byron]]'s poem <i>[[The Destruction of Sennacherib]]</i> including a wry commenta
    9 KB (1,480 words) - 00:26, 9 February 2024
  • Gothic literature influenced more mainstream writers, including [[Lord Byron]] and [[John Keats]] (especially in ''Isabella''). The ghost story and the ...er of 1816 Mary and [[Percy Bysshe Shelley]] stayed with other guests in [[Lord Byron]]'s [[Villa Diodati]] at [[Lake Geneva]]. One evening they decided to hold
    8 KB (1,329 words) - 07:32, 20 April 2024
  • ...clipsed by the even greater success of [[Childe Harold's Pilgrimage]] by [[Lord Byron]], with whom Scott later became friendly while visiting London.
    11 KB (1,790 words) - 08:42, 23 May 2016
  • ...1824, at the age of 22, he was already implicitly comparing himself with [[Lord Byron|Byron]], at that time the meteoric star of European literature.<ref>Robb,G.
    9 KB (1,368 words) - 04:31, 5 September 2017
  • ...The Scottish writer Robert Burns and the English writers Sir Walter Scott, Lord Byron, Percy Bysshe Shelley an John Keats were very popular in the New World whil
    9 KB (1,383 words) - 15:19, 20 March 2023
  • ...oldt]], [[Friedrich Schleiermacher]], [[Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel]], [[Lord Byron]], [[Barthold Georg Niebuhr]], and others. In August 1822 he returned to th
    11 KB (1,710 words) - 09:21, 31 July 2023
  • ...' (1807) was savagely attacked in the influential ''Edinburgh Review''. [[Lord Byron]] was among those out of sympathy with his style: in ''English Bards and Sc
    15 KB (2,315 words) - 14:14, 19 March 2022
  • *[[Lord Byron]] would consume vast quantities of white vinegar to keep his complexion pal
    18 KB (2,906 words) - 10:10, 28 February 2024
  • ...rt Burns]], [[William Wordsworth]], [[George Gordon Byron, 6th Baron Byron|Lord Byron]], [[John Keats]], [[Alfred, Lord Tennyson|Lord Tennyson]], [[R. S. Thomas]
    55 KB (8,409 words) - 06:07, 3 April 2024
  • ...hard-hearted about economics. Romantic poets were the harshest critics. [[Lord Byron]] ridiculed what he termed Malthus's "eleventh commandment, 'Thou shalt not
    20 KB (3,113 words) - 04:50, 15 November 2007
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