From keeping a pet bear at Cambridge to navigating countless love affairs, there are many words to describe Lord Byron other than ‘poet’

By Lauren Good

Published: Thursday, 18 April 2024 at 07:51 AM


Who was Lord Byron?

Born George Gordon Byron on 22 January 1788, the poet – one of the famous of the Romantics – was the only son of Captain ‘Mad Jack’ Byron and Catherine Gordon, a Scottish heiress. Catherine relocated to Aberdeen with her infant son in 1789, where she was left to fend for herself after her husband’s exile to avoid being jailed for debt.

Byron’s childhood in Aberdeen was marred by hardship; his mother was volatile, flitting between violence and tenderness towards her son. She even allegedly dubbed him a ‘lame brat’ due to a birth defect affecting his foot.

Contemporary accounts suggest Byron was born with a clubfoot affecting his right side, which would have led to other physical health complications such as a shorter leg and altered gait.

In 1798, at the age of ten, Byron inherited Newstead Abbey and the title ‘Baron Byron of Rochdale’ upon his great uncle’s death. He would eventually sell the Abbey in 1818 for £94,500, to settle his debts.

Following his initial education at Aberdeen Grammar School, Byron then attended Harrow from the age of 13. By this time, he had discovered his love of writing and found a favourite spot: the graveyard of St Mary’s Church in Harrow-on-the-Hill.

He would refer to this location in a letter to John Murray when arranging the burial of his daughter Allegra, in 1822, saying: “There is a spot in the churchyard, near the footpath, on the brow of the hill looking towards Windsor, and a tomb under a large tree (bearing the name of Peachie, or Peachey), where I used to sit for hours and hours when a boy.”

After Harrow, Byron attended Trinity College, Cambridge, which he later reminisced as “the most romantic period of [his] life”. It was during his time there that an intriguing incident unfolded: upon being denied permission to bring his pet dog, Byron exploited a loophole in the university’s regulations and arrived with a bear instead. Remarkably, his argument that there were no explicit provisions against the more unconventional pet prevailed, and he could be seen walking the grounds with the bear.

After his time at university, Byron took up a seat in the House of Lords. However, he soon became restless and instead began a two-year long tour around Europe with his friend, John Cam Hobhouse. It was on this trip that he fell particularly in love with Greece, a passion that would define the later period of his life.

Lord Byron in Greek Costume
Romantic poet Lord Byron wearing Greek costume, after a painting by Thomas Phillips (Photo by Hulton Archive/Getty Images)

What is Lord Byron most famous for?

Lord Byron is renowned for his contributions to the Romantic movement in literature. He gained widespread fame with the first two cantos of his narrative poem Childe Harold’s Pilgrimage in 1812, the reflections of a young man disillusioned with his life of pleasure.

However, it is Byron’s satirical epic Don Juan that remains perhaps his most famous work today. Written in ottava rima, a form popularised by Italian poets, the poem follows the romantic escapades of its protagonist.

In addition to these works, Byron penned numerous other poems, including She Walks in Beauty and When We Two Parted. However, Byron’s influence extends beyond literature; he is also known for his love affairs that often embroiled him in scandal.

Lord Byron’s love affairs

Byron had countless love affairs with both sexes throughout his life. During his time at Trinity College, Cambridge, he fell in love with a choirboy, John Edleston. Their intimacy lasted until Byron left Cambridge, in 1807. His passion for Edleston is made clear in his poem To Thyrza:

Ours too the glance none saw beside;

The smile none else might understand;

The whisper’d thought of hearts allied,

The pressure of the thrilling hand;

The kiss so guiltless and refin’d

That Love each warmer wish forbore;

Those eyes proclaim’d so pure a mind,

Ev’n passion blush’d to plead for more.

Perhaps the most famous of all Byron’s affairs, though, was with Lady Caroline Lamb – wife to William Lamb, who would later become the 2nd Viscount Melbourne. The two met in 1812, and Byron was captivated.

The couple were far from discrete; Byron described her as “the cleverest most agreeable, absurd, amiable, perplexing, dangerous fascinating little being that lives now or ought to have lived 2000 years ago”. Caroline even attempted to persuade Byron to elope with her, despite still being married to William.

Portrait of Lady Caroline Lamb
Portrait of Lady Caroline Lamb, a friend of the English poet Lord Byron (Photo by DeAgostini/Getty Images)

This affair lasted from March to August, and its end would have a lasting impact on Caroline. She declared him ‘mad, bad and dangerous to know’ – a description that would forever be associated with him. And that wasn’t all; four years later, in 1816, she humiliated Byron in a highly esteemed novel //Glenarvon, which depicts him as a character who betrays those around him.

Another of Byron’s love affairs wrapped in scandal – but somewhat unconfirmed – was with his married half-sister, Augusta Leigh. Despite being half-siblings, the two hadn’t met until Byron was a student at Harrow. After this meeting, the two wrote to each other regularly.

It is unknown how much truth there is to the claims of incest surrounding Byron and Augusta. The starkest piece of evidence lies in the birth of her third child, Elizabeth Medora Leigh, in 1814.