LORD  BYRON  and  his  TIMES
Byron
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Journal of the Conversations of Lord Byron
Shelley and Keats
INTRODUCTION & INDEXES
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JOURNAL

OF THE

CONVERSATIONS

OF

LORD BYRON:

NOTED DURING A RESIDENCE WITH HIS LORDSHIP

AT PISA,

IN THE YEARS 1821 AND 1822.


BY THOMAS MEDWIN, ESQ.

OF THE 24TH LIGHT DRAGOONS,

AUTHOR OF “AHASUERUS THE WANDERER.”


LONDON:
PRINTED FOR HENRY COLBURN, NEW BURLINGTON STREET.
1824.


During our evening ride the conversation happened to turn upon the rival Reviews.

William Harness, in Blackwood's Magazine

“I know no two men,” said he, “who have been so infamously treated, as Shelley and Keats. If I had known
238CONVERSATIONS OF
that
Milman had been the author of that article on ‘The Revolt of Islam,’ I would never have mentioned ‘Fazio’ among the plays of the day,—and scarcely know why I paid him the compliment. In consequence of the shameless personality of that and another number of ‘The Quarterly,’ every one abuses Shelley,—his name is coupled with every thing that is opprobrious: but he is one of the most moral as well as amiable men I know. I have now been intimate with him for years, and every year has added to my regard for him.—Judging from Milman, Christianity would appear a bad religion for a poet, and not a very good one for a man. His ‘Siege of Jerusalem’ is one cento from Milton; and in style and language he is evidently an imitator of the very man whom he most abuses. No one has been puffed like Milman: he owes his extravagant praise to Heber. These Quarterly Reviewers scratch one another’s backs at a prodigious rate. Then as to Keats, though I am no admirer of his poetry, I do not envy the man, whoever he was, that attacked and killed him. Except a couplet of Dryden’s,
‘On his own bed of torture let him lie,
Fit garbage for the hell-hound infamy,’
LORD BYRON239
I know no lines more cutting than those in ‘
Adonais,’* or more feeling than the whole elegy.

“As Keats is now gone, we may speak of him. I am always battling with the Snake about Keats, and wonder what he finds to make a god of, in that idol of the Cockneys: besides, I always ask Shelley why he does not follow his style, and make himself one of the school, if he think it so divine. He will, like me, return some day to admire Pope, and think ‘The Rape of the Lock’ and its sylphs worth fifty ‘Endymions,’ with their faun and satyr machinery. I remember Keats somewhere says that ‘flowers would not blow, leaves bud,’ &c. if man and woman did not kiss. How sentimental!

240 CONVERSATIONS OF

I remarked that ‘Hyperion’ was a fine fragment, and a proof of his poetical genius.

“‘Hyperion!’” said he: “why, a man might as well pretend to be rich who had one diamond. ‘Hyperion’ indeed! ‘Hyperion’ to a satyr! Why, there is a fine line in Lord Thurlow (looking to the West that was gloriously golden with the sunset) which I mean to borrow some day:
‘And all that gorgeous company of clouds’—

“Do you think they will suspect me of taking from Lord Thurlow?”


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