George Gordon sixth Baron Byron

-
Standard Name: Byron, George Gordon,,, sixth Baron
Used Form: Lord Byron

Connections

Connections Sort descending Author name Excerpt
Publishing Mary Cowden Clarke
In her memoirs MCC wrote that all my experience of publishers has been most agreeable. Contrary to the prejudiced opinion sometimes expressed, that authors and publishers are often antagonistic in their transactions, I have invariably...
Publishing Alicia Tyndal Palmer
Her title-page quotes a wish voiced on 1 December 1814 in the House of Lords that it were possible to summon Sobieski to attend the Congress of Vienna which was even then deciding the political...
Publishing Elizabeth Thomas
With Purity of Heart; or, The Ancient Costume. A Tale (and with a different publisher and different pseudonym), Elizabeth Thomas entered the specific battle-ground surrounding Byron and Lady Caroline Lamb .
Garside, Peter et al., editors. The English Novel 1770-1829. Oxford University Press, 2000, 2 vols.
2: 438
Publishing Margaret Fuller
This was followed by a review, in the August issue, of the novels of Edward Bulwer (later Bulwer-Lytton) (which she put forward as worth examining because of their moral qualities). Further essays by MF appeared...
Publishing Marguerite Gardiner Countess of Blessington
A Journal of the Conversations of Lord Byron with the Countess of Blessington appeared in the New Monthly Magazine.
Molloy, Joseph Fitzgerald. The Most Gorgeous Lady Blessington. 4th ed., Downey, 1896.
219
Publishing Dervla Murphy
Thinking of her father's years of hoping and struggling to publish his novels, DM said she felt her life had been chosen as the medium through which all the strivings of generations of scribbling Murphys...
Reception Felicia Hemans
Nevertheless, the Romantic Circles Electronic Edition of this poem edited by Nanora Sweet and Barbara Taylor represents it as a much more open and indeed sceptical text than FH 's own comment suggests, and subtitles...
Reception Hester Lynch Piozzi
The very young Laetitia-Matilda Hawkins came unexpectedly on the letter of rebuke to Johnson while helping her father with his biographical work: she admired the letter enough to record her admiration years later, though she...
Reception Lady Caroline Lamb
From the date of Byron's death, LCL lived with a constant succession of revelations in celebrity memoirs, which often contained something hurtful to herself. Thomas Medwin , whom she respected as a truth-teller, printed an...
Reception Felicia Hemans
FH 's circulation in her lifetime rivalled that of her most prominent male contemporaries. With sales of about 18,000 volumes, she outsold Coleridge and Wordsworth , if not Scott and Byron . She proved, as...
Reception Henry Handel Richardson
The Times Literary Supplement provided another favourable review, basing its approbation on the persuasive character-drawing of the supposedly male author.
Child, Harold H. “Ultima Thule”. Times Literary Supplement, No. 1407, 17 Jan. 1929, p. 42.
42
Its comments had already been outshone by Gerald Gould in the Daily News...
Reception Augusta Ada Byron
The most famous literary response to Ada was penned by her father, Lord Byron , in the opening lines to the Third Canto of Childe Harold's Pilgrimage: Is thy face like thy mother's, my...
Reception Mary Renault
After completing Return to Night (published in 1947), MR spent six months researching a novel about the life of Byron . She abandoned the project when she became aware that previously unpublished correspondence between Byron...
Residence Mary Shelley
MS moved from Bagni di Lucca to Este and then to join her husband in Venice, where he had gone to visit Byron .
Shelley, Mary. The Journals of Mary Shelley, 1814-1844. Editors Feldman, Paula R. and Diana Scott-Kilvert, Johns Hopkins University Press, 1995.
226-7
Mellor, Anne K. Mary Shelley: Her Life, Her Fiction, Her Monsters. Routledge, 1988.
xvii
Sunstein, Emily W. Mary Shelley: Romance and Reality. Little, Brown, 1989.
157-8
Textual Features Marguerite Gardiner Countess of Blessington
On Byron 's death she wrote an elegy in twelve couplets.
Blessington, Marguerite Gardiner, Countess of. “Introduction”. Conversations of Lord Byron, edited by Ernest J., Jr Lovell, Princeton University Press, 1969, pp. 3-114.
65
Most of her poems about women celebrate those who are spotless in morals and reputation—she takes care that non-spotless women are killed off...

Timeline

No timeline events available.

Texts

No bibliographical results available.