Lord Byron: Mad, Bad, and Dangerous to Know

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Published 2021-11-08
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Source/Further reading:

Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, in-depth: www.oxforddnb.com/view/10.1093/ref:odnb/9780198614…

Britannica, overview: www.britannica.com/biography/Lord-Byron-poet 

Biography, overview: www.biography.com/writer/lord-byron 

Slate, overview: slate.com/culture/2009/07/edna-o-brien-s-byron-in-…

Guardian, Byron’s exile: www.theguardian.com/books/2002/nov/09/classics.poe…

Guardian, Byron’s sexual escapades: www.theguardian.com/theobserver/1999/may/30/featur…

Guardian, the complexities of Lord Byron: www.theguardian.com/books/2019/oct/06/the-private-…

NYTimes, Byron’s sexuality: www.nytimes.com/2003/01/12/books/i-love-not-woman-…

Byron’s eating problems: hekint.org/2018/10/05/lord-byron-and-his-strange-r…

Byron and Augusta: www.theguardian.com/books/2000/aug/12/biography 

British Library, punishments for homosexuality in Byron’s time: blogs.bl.uk/untoldlives/2020/06/remembering-the-ve…

NYTimes, Byron and Shelley: www.nytimes.com/2011/05/29/travel/lake-geneva-as-b…

Infamous Edinburgh Review of Byron’s first collection: ir.vanderbilt.edu/bitstream/handle/1803/2465/Edinb…

All Comments (21)
  • @tophers3756
    The fact that Byron's little daughter asked for her father in her deathbed is crushing. That's the true tragedy
  • @areiaaphrodite
    Simon being surprised about Ada Lovelace being Lord Byron's daughter is hilarious because he did a Biographics video on her 3 years ago 😂😂
  • @ryastor
    That bit about his 5 year old dying begging to see her daddy got me crying. How horrible.
  • @-MarcusAurelius
    Fun fact: the Countess Teresa Guiccioli, that Byron had an affair with, is the character “the Countess G______” in Alexandre Dumas’s novel The Count of Monte Cristo. The reason Dumas wrote her name as the “Countess G_____” is because it was extremely common for authors to be sued for libel back then, so by writing her name with a line he made it clear who she was to contemporary readers but without the risk of being sued.
  • So he separated his daughter from her mother, abused the child ignored the mothers plea for her child and instead of giving the child back cause he got bored he decided to orphaned her? That’s beyond evil, cruel and heartless.
  • Just wanted to let Simon know that the Ada Lovelace video was the first of his videos I ever watched and now I'm in an endless loop of Biographics, Geographics, Brain Blaze, Casual Criminalist ect.
  • @ionz75
    In a poetic world, Byron would have died abandoned and alone, begging to see someone he loved...
  • I had to study the poetry of Keats, Byron and Shelley when I was in school. I can barely remember a single line of any of it but the words that always stuck with me were those of my English teacher - “Byron makes the Rolling Stones look luck a bunch of choirboys”.
  • @Tmanowns
    I must say I'm disappointed to see that you left out the the vampire in Vampyre was directly based on Byron. Using his monstrous reputation to draw in women interested in the bad boy, thinking they could redeem him. Yet the Vampire, and Byron, may have had a second layer, but that was merely a façade: his true self was just as awful, soulless, and cruel as the surface suggested, and then some.
  • @wildborr5290
    I can't get over the part where his little girl was left to die alone. I was interested untill that point, but now I couldn't care less about anything he did. Absolute piece of s#$t
  • @zaubermaus8190
    it always amazes me how well connected prominent people of the past really were...
  • @spirosgreek1171
    Byron is still remembered as a hero in Greece. Statues and roads bearing his name are everywhere. Even an entire District in Athens is named after him. Thank you for this great video
  • @ignitionfrn2223
    1:40 - Chapter 1 - The limping devil 4:45 - Chapter 2 - Boys & bards 8:10 - Mid roll ads 9:35 - Chapter 3 - The grand tour 13:05 - Chapter 4 - Walking in beauty 17:20 - Chapter 5 - Escape to the continent 20:40 - Chapter 6 - " A grand object"
  • @SoberOKMoments
    Byron's poetry changed my entire concept of literature. I devoured his books as a teen and, at 80, can still today quote much of his poetry. He was a man of his time. Abused and abuser. Tragic for all concerned. But his words vibrate through the ages.
  • He also had a child with his half sister. His legitimate daughter also died at 36. She had her fathers personality , addicted to laudinum and opium. Almost ruined by gambling trying to discover mathematical formulas for gambling. She also did the loose aristocracy bed hoping. So she was similar to her dad without the sexual abuse as a cause. It's a personality trait. Byron was also gonorrhea and syphilis riddled.
  • 16:30 we have confirmation, "Simon has done so many video, he can't keep track." Lovelace is a must watch video.
  • @bluebelle8823
    I'm sorry Simon's reaction to finding out Byron's daughter is Ada Lovelace is gold. So few people know for remember that tid bit. Ada was a genius that comes from her mother's intelligence and her father's creativity. The story about Allegra is interesting. Putting the emotional hit aside because I so cannot deal with that right now. Percy Shelly was the one who visited her? From all that's said about him that feels out of place. Not in a bad way. That said by that point he had lost a child. There was likely some guilt involved there too.
  • @ginnrollins211
    I once did a project on him back in high school. He was pretty much a proto-rock star. He may have been an outright bastard, but then again so is alot of famous historical figures, from Columbus to Mother Theresa. Lord Byron: Pens a great 19th century equivalent of a diss track. Ice Cube and Eminem: We should hang out sometime.
  • @mitchellneu
    Could you please do one on Mary Shelley, similar to how you did Bram Stoker. See how Frankenstein impacted Shelley’s life, as Dracula did Stoker’s?