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GEORGE GORDON BYRON was
born on 22 January 1788 and he inherited the barony in 1798. He went to
school in Dulwich, and then in 1801 to Harrow. In 1805 he went up to Trinity
College, Cambridge, later gaining a reputation in London for his startling
good looks and extravagant behaviour. His first collection of poems, Hours
of Idleness (1807), was not well received, but with the publication
of the first two cantos of Childe Harold's Pilgrimage (1812) he
became famous overnight and increased this fame with a series of wildly
popular 'Eastern Tales'. In 1815 he married the heiress Annabella Milbanke,
but they were separated after a year. Byron shocked society by the rumoured
relationship with his half-sister, Augusta, and in 1816 he left England
for ever. He eventually settled in Italy, where he lived for some time
with Teresa, Contessa Guiccioli. He supported Italian revolutionary movements
and in 1823 he left for Greece to fight in its struggle for independence,
but he contracted a fever and died at Missolonghi in 1824.
Byron's contemporary popularity was based
first on Childe Harold and the 'Tales', and then on Don Juan
(1819–24), his most sophisticated and accomplished writing. He was one
of the strongest exemplars of the Romantic movement, and the Byronic
hero was a prototype widely imitated in European and American literature.
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