Lord Byron


Don Juan
Manfred
Childe Harold's Pilgrimage
Selected Poems
She Walks in Beauty
Byron's Poetry: Authoritative Texts, Letters and Journals, Criticism, Images of Byron
Lord Byron: Complete Works
Lord Byron: The Major Works
Byron: A Life in Ten Letters
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Fragment of a Novel
 
by
Lord Byron
Giaur
Jane and the Madness of Lord Byron (Jane Austen Mysteries, #10)
The Late Lord Byron
Darkness
Byron's Poetry and Prose
Jonathan Strange & Mr Norrell by Susanna ClarkeThe Stress of Her Regard by Tim PowersThe Anubis Gates by Tim PowersThe Twelfth Enchantment by David LissThe Luxury of Exile by Louis Buss
Best Lord Byron Fiction
15 books — 9 voters
Wuthering Heights by Emily BrontëJane Eyre by Charlotte BrontëFrankenstein by Mary Wollstonecraft ShelleyAmerican Psycho by Bret Easton EllisPride and Prejudice by Jane Austen
Best Byronic Hero
5 books — 5 voters

My Imaginary Mary by Cynthia HandMonsters by Sharon DogarThe Monsters We Deserve by Marcus SedgwickStrange Star by Emma CarrollThe Determined Heart by Antoinette May
Mary Shelley in Fiction
39 books — 10 voters
My Imaginary Mary by Cynthia HandAda Lovelace by Anna  DohertyDreaming in Code by Emily Arnold McCullyAda, the Enchantress of Numbers by Ada LovelaceIn Byron's Wake by Miranda Seymour
Ada Byron Lovelace Books
29 books — 2 voters

Byron in Love by Edna O'BrienByron by Fiona MacCarthyByron by Phyllis GrosskurthEnchantress of Numbers by Jennifer ChiaveriniByron and Romanticism by Jerome J. McGann
Books about Lord Byron
60 books — 11 voters

Lord Byron
The poor dog, in life the firmest friend, The first to welcome, foremost to defend, Whose honest heart is still the master's own, Who labours, fights, lives, breathes for him alone, Unhonour'd falls, unnoticed all his worth, Denied in heaven the soul he held on earth, While man, vain insect hopes to be forgiven, And claims himself a sole exclusive heaven. ...more
Lord Byron

T.S. Eliot
Byron’s diabolism, if indeed it deserves the name, was of a mixed type. He shared, to some extent, Shelley’s Promethean attitude, and the Romantic passion for Liberty; and this passion, which inspired his more political outbursts, combined with the image of himself as a man of action to bring about the Greek adventure. And his Promethean attitude merges into a Satanic (Miltonic) attitude. The romantic conception of Milton’s Satan is semi-Promethean, and also contemplates Pride as a virtue. It wo ...more
T.S. Eliot, On Poetry and Poets

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