Lord Byron — "I am a very bad man, but I have a very good heart."
I am a very bad man, but I have a very good heart.
I am a very bad man, but I have a very good heart.
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"Proud Wellington, with eagle beak so curled, That nose, the hook where he suspends the world!"
"I have a great admiration for Napoleon, and I believe he was the greatest man that ever lived."
"The world is a stage, and all the men and women merely players."
"There is something pagan in me that I cannot shake off. In short, I deny nothing, but doubt everything."
"In morality, I prefer Confucius to the ten Commandments and Socrates to St. Paul."
English Romantic poet whose Childe Harold's Pilgrimage (1812-18) and Don Juan (1819-24) made him a continent-wide celebrity; died at Missolonghi fighting for Greek independence. Closely associated with Percy Bysshe Shelley (Geneva summer companion and fellow second-generation Romantic) and John Keats (younger Romantic Byron mocked but later admired). For an intellectual contrast, see William Wordsworth, Lake Poet of pious nature-worship — Byron's mockery of 'the Lakers' Wordsworth, Coleridge, and Southey runs through Don Juan as a sustained literary feud across hundreds of stanzas. The cleanest Romantic-internal split between sincere-pastoral and cynical-worldly poetics.
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