Byron's Revisited Haunts.(19th-century poet, Lord Byron)(Critical Essay)

From: Studies in Romanticism | Date: June 22, 2000| Author: PHILLIPSON, MARK | Copyright information

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BEFORE HE LEFT ENGLAND IN A FLURRY OF SCANDAL, AND BEFORE HE created that most disillusioned of expatriates, Childe Harold, Lord Byron was irresistibly drawn to self-exile. In particular he paid close attention to the example of Shakespeare's misanthropic exile, Timon of Athens. Not only did Byron fashion Harold in the mold of Timon, arranging for his character to escape, like the disillusioned Athenian, from the "heartless parasites of present cheer" (Canto I, line 7...

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