
Contents
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‘Genuine Bards’: Byron’s Admiration for the Lakers ‘Genuine Bards’: Byron’s Admiration for the Lakers
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Idiots, Asses, and Men of the World: Byron, the Lakers, and Poetics Idiots, Asses, and Men of the World: Byron, the Lakers, and Poetics
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Serious Imitations: The Wordsworthian Influence Serious Imitations: The Wordsworthian Influence
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Renegado Rascals: Byron on the Lakers’ Politics Renegado Rascals: Byron on the Lakers’ Politics
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Suggested Reading Suggested Reading
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23 Byron and the Lake Poets
Get accessSimon Bainbridge is Professor of Romantic Studies in the Department of English Literature and Creative Writing at Lancaster University. He has published widely on the literature and culture of the Romantic period and is the author of the monographs Napoleon and English Romanticism (1995), British Poetry and the Revolutionary and Napoleonic Wars (2003), and Mountaineering and British Romanticism: The Literary Cultures of Climbing, 1770–1836 (2020). He is a past president of the British Association for Romantic Studies and is currently a Trustee of the Wordsworth Trust.
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Published:22 October 2024
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Abstract
This essay examines Lord Byron’s response to the poetry, politics, and personas of the Lake Poets: William Wordsworth, Samuel Taylor Coleridge, and Robert Southey. It explores Byron’s career-long sense of rivalry, admiration, and opposition towards the Lakers and how these responses influenced his own works and his poetic identity. It argues that Byron sought to define himself and his poetry against this trio of poets, presenting himself as a poet of oceans rather than lakes, as a man of the world, and as a writer of global subject matter and importance. It discusses Byron’s critique of the Lakers for misdirecting their poetic talents through their chosen subject and styles of writing, as well as for betraying the liberal causes they had espoused in their early careers. It concludes with discussions of Don Juan and The Vision of Judgment as the brilliant culminations of Byron’s complex engagement with the Lake Poets.
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