Summary of your 'study carrel' ============================== This is a summary of your Distant Reader 'study carrel'. The Distant Reader harvested & cached your content into a collection/corpus. It then applied sets of natural language processing and text mining against the collection. The results of this process was reduced to a database file -- a 'study carrel'. The study carrel can then be queried, thus bringing light specific characteristics for your collection. These characteristics can help you summarize the collection as well as enumerate things you might want to investigate more closely. This report is a terse narrative report, and when processing is complete you will be linked to a more complete narrative report. Eric Lease Morgan Number of items in the collection; 'How big is my corpus?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 16 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 103093 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 75 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 16 Byron 14 Lord 13 Mr. 13 England 12 London 12 Lady 11 Moore 10 Sir 10 Mrs. 9 Shelley 8 Murray 8 Hobhouse 7 Miss 7 Leigh 7 Harold 7 Childe 6 Juan 6 Hunt 6 Greece 6 God 6 English 6 Dr. 6 Don 5 time 5 life 5 Scott 5 Newstead 5 John 5 Footnote 4 lordship 4 letter 4 William 4 Venice 4 Missolonghi 4 LETTER 4 January 4 Italy 4 Hodgson 4 Dallas 4 April 3 man 3 love 3 footnote 3 September 3 Rogers 3 Ravenna 3 P.S. 3 Milbanke 3 March 3 July Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 3291 time 3148 letter 3029 man 2318 day 2185 life 2042 friend 1752 thing 1686 year 1503 mind 1306 world 1276 part 1264 heart 1167 character 1162 poet 1151 nothing 1138 poem 1131 woman 1108 word 1080 footnote 1069 way 1069 love 991 subject 982 name 971 opinion 969 work 963 person 955 nature 927 one 901 feeling 893 place 893 death 861 line 832 other 824 hand 810 wife 809 p. 752 truth 735 power 722 circumstance 716 account 712 cause 703 author 702 fact 702 child 694 country 686 spirit 684 book 662 manner 660 mother 652 reason Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 21469 _ 10506 Byron 5069 Lord 2783 Lady 2238 Mr. 1290 Moore 1120 Hunt 1074 Mrs. 996 England 841 Shelley 733 c. 697 London 694 Greece 671 John 661 Sir 658 Murray 619 Leigh 600 Footnote 546 Dr. 545 Miss 541 Venice 527 Hobhouse 520 Harold 512 God 511 Childe 500 BYRON 462 B. 449 Augusta 439 Newstead 431 English 423 vol 412 MR 400 Mary 350 de 339 Juan 332 Don 329 thou 320 April 317 Scott 317 July 311 Harrow 309 Italy 306 March 302 William 299 Hodgson 295 Pope 291 Ravenna 290 Missolonghi 290 Chaworth 285 . Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 25239 i 19314 he 15970 it 8605 you 8232 him 6042 me 4609 she 4450 they 4404 we 3246 them 2548 her 2137 himself 1183 us 874 myself 462 itself 459 themselves 425 herself 424 yours 383 one 263 thee 262 yourself 195 mine 97 ourselves 81 his 29 theirs 29 hers 27 ours 17 thyself 11 ye 7 je 6 on''t 6 ''s 4 oneself 4 hodgson,--i 4 ha 3 thy 3 thou 3 sat 3 mother,--i 3 augusta,--you 3 ''em 2 your''n 2 yet,--i 2 wrote,-- 2 these:-- 2 rogers:-- 2 is''t 2 io 2 ii 2 hon Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 59979 be 25616 have 6833 do 5022 say 3647 make 3595 see 3369 write 2919 know 2486 give 2359 take 2317 think 2174 go 1797 find 1679 come 1516 tell 1497 leave 1307 seem 1285 hear 1245 speak 1240 believe 1229 call 1203 feel 1201 send 1134 wish 1103 appear 1050 show 1017 follow 966 become 818 read 815 look 809 live 804 receive 802 return 788 meet 787 pass 785 publish 784 bring 770 let 741 get 706 love 667 begin 665 add 653 bear 652 keep 646 remain 644 ask 620 suppose 596 hope 583 like 551 die Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 14157 not 4806 so 3937 more 3196 very 2819 only 2667 well 2607 most 2451 great 2373 much 2309 other 2303 good 2289 never 2262 own 2132 first 2084 now 1943 as 1922 then 1888 such 1870 even 1817 ever 1650 last 1578 too 1524 up 1517 same 1440 little 1325 long 1322 out 1308 still 1281 many 1259 also 1155 however 1116 here 1077 again 1018 far 1017 always 961 few 943 least 926 yet 878 young 878 less 868 perhaps 804 old 800 thus 779 high 776 rather 753 there 752 once 721 all 694 just 681 whole Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 824 least 740 good 452 most 257 great 168 bad 157 high 65 slight 65 early 63 fine 59 dear 55 near 50 strong 50 eld 48 noble 40 pure 40 deep 37 late 33 small 29 happy 27 young 27 bright 24 bitter 22 old 22 manif 22 full 19 true 18 warm 18 low 16 large 16 able 15 long 15 dark 15 clever 15 Most 14 fair 12 mean 12 lofty 11 lively 10 handsome 9 sure 9 sublime 9 gay 9 brave 8 lovely 7 vile 7 j 7 gloomy 7 fierce 7 close 7 base Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 2155 most 118 least 81 well 2 worst 2 says:-- 2 goethe 1 warmest 1 lookest 1 hottest 1 historian--"_the 1 greatest Top 50 Internet domains; "What Webbed places are alluded to in this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 www.pgdpcanada.net Top 50 URLs; "What is hyperlinked from this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------- 1 http://www.pgdpcanada.net Top 50 email addresses; "Who are you gonna call?" ------------------------------------------------- 1 ccx074@coventry.ac.uk Top 50 positive assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-noun?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 53 byron did not 42 byron was not 26 _ is _ 22 byron had not 19 _ do _ 18 _ had _ 17 _ have _ 16 _ did _ 16 _ was _ 15 _ are _ 13 _ am _ 10 _ were _ 10 _ write _ 9 _ are not 9 _ is not 9 _ know _ 9 byron was still 8 _ did not 8 _ does _ 8 _ has _ 8 _ said _ 8 byron was so 7 _ say _ 7 _ was not 7 byron had already 7 byron is not 6 byron was always 6 byron was as 6 byron was very 6 hunt did not 6 world is too 5 _ do not 5 _ done _ 5 _ make _ 5 byron does not 5 byron had never 5 byron was dead 5 byron was only 5 byron was too 5 love was not 5 time is now 4 _ do n''t 4 _ feeling _ 4 _ is very 4 _ read _ 4 _ thought _ 4 byron had nobly 4 byron has not 4 byron is ill 4 byron left england Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 3 _ are not concerned 3 byron did not then 3 byron was not less 3 world has no right 2 _ am no better 2 _ are not answerable 2 _ have no great 2 _ was not guilt 2 byron had no charge 2 byron had no difficulty 2 byron had no such 2 byron had not yet 2 byron took no counsel 2 byron was not alone 2 byron was not always 2 byron was not only 2 byron was not so 2 byron was not suitable 2 byron was not unmindful 2 friends are not numerous 2 letter had not _ 2 letter shows not only 2 men had no cause 2 men were not over 2 moore makes no such 2 time has not yet 1 _ am no _ 1 _ am not prejudiced 1 _ are not at 1 _ did not then 1 _ do no good 1 _ do not _ 1 _ had no business 1 _ had no enemies 1 _ had no versification 1 _ had not suffer''d 1 _ has no otherwise 1 _ has no rights 1 _ has not luck 1 _ has not yet 1 _ have no opinion 1 _ have not entirely 1 _ is not amiss 1 byron did not correctly 1 byron did not invariably 1 byron did not often 1 byron had no belief 1 byron had no equal 1 byron had no feeling 1 byron had no great A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 8901 author = Byron, George Gordon Byron, Baron title = The Works of Lord Byron: Letters and Journals. Vol. 1 date = keywords = April; Athens; August; Byron; Cambridge; Carlisle; College; Dallas; Dr.; Drury; England; English; George; Greece; Hanson; Harrow; Hobhouse; Hodgson; Hon; January; John; July; Lady; London; Lord; March; Miss; Moore; Mother; Mr.; Mrs.; Murray; Newstead; October; Pigot; Poems; Rev.; Sir; Southwell; St.; William; dear; footnote; letter; life summary = In a letter to Mrs. Byron, dated September 1, 1799, Hanson describes Dr. Glennie''s "Academy," where he had shortly before left the boy:-I entertain a very great affection for Lord Byron, and I trust I shall [Footnote 1: This letter is endorsed by Hanson, "Lord Byron to his house in Piccadilly is her "great comfort" (Lady Byron''s letters to Mrs. Leigh, January 16 and January 23, 1816, quoted in the ''Quarterly Review'' affection for Murray is marked by the postscript to the letter to Mrs. Byron of June 22, 1809 (see also ''Life'', pp. [Footnote 1: Mrs. Byron, writing to Hanson, July 24, 1804, says, [Footnote 1: In consequence of this letter, Augusta Byron wrote as "Your letter," he writes, "supposes that Lord Byron was desirous to [Footnote 1: Mrs. Byron, writing to Hanson (June 25, 1805), says, "The [Footnote 1: This and Letter 33 are written to Byron''s Harrow friend, id = 9921 author = Byron, George Gordon Byron, Baron title = The Works of Lord Byron: Letters and Journals. Vol. 2 date = keywords = Byron; Cambridge; Caroline; Childe; Dallas; December; Drury; England; English; February; Francis; George; Giaour; God; Hanson; Harold; Hodgson; Holland; House; Hunt; James; John; July; June; Lady; Lamb; Lane; Leigh; London; Lord; March; Miss; Moore; Morning; Mr.; Mrs.; Murray; November; October; Post; Prince; Review; Rogers; Scott; September; Sheridan; Sir; St.; Street; Thomas; Webster; William; dear; footnote; letter; lordship summary = [Footnote 4: The poem remained unpublished till after Byron''s death. [Footnote 1: The following is Murray''s letter, to which Byron replies: [Footnote 1: The lines in which Hodgson answered Byron''s letter on his [Footnote 3: Francis Hodgson, writing to Byron, October 8, 1811, says, Byron said of him (Lady Blessington''s ''Conversations with Lord [Footnote 1: For Lord Holland, see ''Letters'', vol. [Footnote 2: Byron, writing to John Hanson, February 28, 1812, says: [Footnote 1: This letter refers to the future Lady Byron, the "Miss This letter she really dictated to Lord Byron to send to Lady The same day Byron writes a second letter to Hanson: [Footnote 2: For Byron''s intention to go abroad with Lord and Lady [Footnote 2: John Murray writes, in an undated letter to Byron, [Footnote 1: Moore wrote to Byron in 1813 an undated letter, in which Some time last year Lord Byron published a Poem, called _The Bride of id = 32990 author = Byron, May title = A Day with Lord Byron date = keywords = Byron; Shelley; day; illustration; love summary = [Illustration: A Day with Byron] A DAY WITH LORD BYRON and that pale, scornful, beautiful face, "like a spirit, good or evil," There''s not a joy the world can give like that it takes away, But the tender bloom of heart is gone, ere youth itself be past. is Medora, beloved of the Corsair,--Medora of the deep blue eye and long She walks in beauty, like the night She walks in beauty, like the night Percy Bysshe Shelley, "the most companionable person under thirty," topics, be it understood, for Byron is not an omnivorous reader like With one star sparkling through it like an eye. And saw each other''s dark eyes darting light And saw each other''s dark eyes darting light selfish and sensual Byron of Venetian days is entirely a thing of the It is the hour when Byron''s brain becomes thronged with a glowing id = 41809 author = Edgcumbe, Richard title = Byron: The Last Phase date = keywords = April; Augusta; Bentham; Bruno; Byron; Chaworth; Colonel; Dr.; England; Gamba; Government; Greece; Greeks; Hunt; January; Lady; Leigh; London; Lord; Lovelace; Mary; Mavrocordato; Millingen; Missolonghi; Moore; Mr.; Mrs.; Parry; Shelley; Sir; Stanhope; Trelawny; turkish summary = Byron at the same time wrote to Prince Mavrocordato, and sent the letter Lady Byron writes from her own personal experience of a time when tender lordship goes, I go.'' Lord Byron smiled, and said: ''No, Tita, I shall ''At no time in his life,'' says Millingen, ''did Lord Byron find himself ''Lord Byron spoke of death with great composure,'' says Parry; ''and ''No,'' replied Lord Byron, ''there is no time--mind you execute my orders. Mavrocordato spoke of Lord Byron as the best friend of Greece, and months after Byron''s death, Trelawny, in a letter to Mary Shelley, spoke writing to Mrs. Leigh, said that, if Byron had never written a line in Some time previous to Lord Byron''s death, he began to feel in a letter to the _Times_ that Mrs. Leigh was like a mother to Byron, and In spite of Lady Byron''s prejudice against Mrs. Leigh, as time went on she id = 10421 author = Galt, John title = The Life of Lord Byron date = keywords = Albanians; Ali; Athens; Byron; Childe; Don; England; God; Greece; Greeks; Harold; Hobhouse; Hunt; Juan; London; Lord; Missolonghi; Moore; Mrs; Newstead; Pasha; Pisa; Ravenna; Shelley; Sir; Turks; Vizier; chapter; english; lordship; man; time summary = adventures of Lord Byron, it seems necessary to consider the probable consideration only that induces us to give Lord Byron''s poems a place The Effect of Ali Pasha''s Character on Lord Byron--Sketch of the A short time before the arrival of Lord Byron at Joannina, a large Soon after their arrival at Athens, Mr Hobhouse left Lord Byron to At that time Lord Byron, if he did pity the condition of the Greeks, after Lord Byron''s arrival, and his Lordship was particularly anxious Lord Byron was, at that time, far indeed from being At no time, I imagine, could it be said that Lord Byron was one of under obligations to a mean man; at the same time Lord Byron, on his character of Lord Byron, and given cause to every admirer of his who was intimate with Lord Byron, if he really thought his Lordship id = 41701 author = Gribble, Francis Henry title = The Love Affairs of Lord Byron date = keywords = Byron; Caroline; Chaworth; Childe; Clairmont; Countess; England; Guiccioli; Harold; Hobhouse; Hodgson; Lady; Lamb; Leigh; Lord; Lovelace; Madame; Mary; Milbanke; Miss; Moore; Mr.; Mrs.; Murray; Oxford; Shelley; Smith; William; love summary = Whether a book is called "The Love Affairs of Lord Byron" or "The Life of "Lord Byron," says Hobhouse, in his matter-of-fact way, "is, of "Lord Byron''s poem," writes Walsh in 1817, "has rendered the poor lady no indeed, is the letter written by Byron to Mary Chaworth five years after Byron had first met Miss Milbanke at the time when Lady Caroline Lamb was "At a little before twelve," Hobhouse notes, "I handed Lady Byron How much Lady Byron knew, at the time, about these matters is doubtful. Very likely he was angry with Lady Byron because he did not love Lushington, as we know from a published letter from him to Lady Byron, Lushington, as his letter to Lady Byron sets forth, received a visit from wrote him such letters as he was now receiving from Lady Byron--to Some of these letters were written at a time when Lady Byron believed her id = 25977 author = Guiccioli, Teresa, contessa di title = My Recollections of Lord Byron date = keywords = Byron; CHAPTER; Cambridge; Chaworth; Childe; Count; Dallas; Don; England; English; Footnote; France; G----; Galt; Gamba; Genoa; God; Greece; Harold; Harrow; Hobhouse; Italy; Juan; Kennedy; Lady; London; Lord; Milbank; Miss; Missolonghi; Moore; Mr.; Murray; Newstead; Pisa; Ravenna; Rogers; Scott; Shakspeare; Shelley; Taine; Venice; great; life; love; man summary = Albrizzi at Venice, Beyle (Stendhal) at Milan, Lady Blessington and Mrs. Shelley in Italy, have drawn of Lord Byron there is much truth, and that, in speaking of so great a man as Lord Byron, there is no fear Those who knew and loved Lord Byron even more as a man than a genius "One day," says Mr. Stendhall, who knew Lord Byron at Milan, in 1817, and saw a great deal Galt with respect to Lord Byron, we must allow that the great poet''s Long''s death was the cause of great grief to Lord Byron. Lord Byron had a passionate nature, a feeling heart, a powerful "An anchorite," says Moore, "who knew Lord Byron about this time, could for the poet to be great the man must suffer, Lord Byron, it must be for the poet to be great the man must suffer, Lord Byron, it must be id = 35733 author = Miller, Barnette title = Leigh Hunt''s Relations with Byron, Shelley and Keats date = keywords = April; August; Blackwood; Byron; Cockney; Contemporaries; Correspondence; Examiner; Haydon; Hazlitt; Hunt; Ibid; John; Journals; Keats; Leigh; Letters; Life; Literary; London; Lord; Moore; Mr.; Quarterly; Rimini; Shelley; Story; Works; York summary = The relations of Leigh Hunt to Byron, Shelley and Keats have been treated relations of Leigh Hunt with Byron, Shelley, and Keats, a brief survey of Lord Byron, Shelley and Leigh Hunt feeling."[3] Like Shelley, Hunt had so great an inclination to Hunt, like Byron and Shelley, had curious ideas about the relation of the The influence of Hunt''s poetry upon Keats and Shelley, in its general influence of Hunt''s diction and versification upon Keats and Shelley is Examiner_ of June 1, 1817, in Hunt''s review of Keats''s _Poems_ of 1817, ultra-liberalism," he, like Hunt, Byron and Shelley continued to wear the state of affairs between Byron and Shelley must have given Hunt great until your arrival."[374] April 10, Shelley wrote again to Hunt of Byron''s articles--Members of the Cockney group--Byron--Hunt--Keats--Shelley-Hunt, Shelley, Hazlitt and Keats were the chief targets in the Cockney Hunt''s services of friendship to Byron, Shelley and Keats, his able id = 14841 author = Moore, Thomas title = Life of Lord Byron, Vol. 6 With His Letters and Journals date = keywords = Bowles; Byron; Cephalonia; Colonel; Committee; Count; Dr.; Earl; England; English; February; Gamba; Gell; Genoa; George; Gilchrist; God; Government; Greece; Greeks; Harrow; Homer; Hunt; Italy; Ithaca; John; LETTER; Lady; London; Lord; Mavrocordato; Missolonghi; Mr.; Mrs.; P.S.; Parry; Pope; Prince; Review; Sir; Stanhope; Suliotes; Turks; William; footnote; life; lordship; turkish summary = LETTERS AND JOURNALS OF LORD BYRON, with NOTICES OF HIS LIFE, from of the poet''s new intimates, Lord Byron took one day an opportunity, voyage, Lord Byron (says Count Gamba) "appeared thoughtful, and mutual admiration, had taken place between Lord Byron and the great the appearance of the Greek fleet," Lord Byron, in a note on this In the mean time Lord Byron was preparing busily for his departure, "Lord Byron," says Colonel Stanhope, in a letter dated views:--"Lord Byron said that he was an ardent friend of publicity appeared to Count Gamba, Lord Byron was, for the first time, aware of have been the nature of Lord Byron''s conduct towards me from the time Mr. Bowles says, that "Lord Byron _knows_ he does _not_ deserve this Barff, Mr., Lord Byron''s letters to, on the Greek cause Bowring, Dr., Lord Byron''s letters to, on the Greek cause, and his id = 16548 author = Moore, Thomas title = Life of Lord Byron, Vol. 3 With His Letters and Journals date = keywords = April; Byron; Childe; Corsair; Diodati; England; February; Footnote; Gifford; Harold; Hobhouse; January; LETTER; Lady; London; Lord; MOORE; MURRAY; March; Milan; Miss; Mr.; Mrs.; P.S.; Polidori; Scott; September; Shelley; Sir; Venice; good; like; think; time summary = LETTERS AND JOURNALS OF LORD BYRON, WITH NOTICES OF HIS LIFE, from "Redde a little of many things--shall get in all my books to-morrow. "I will answer your letter this evening; in the mean time, it may order the repast, and knowing that Lord Byron, for the last two days, time, if you don''t come and see me, I shall think that Sam.''s bank up my mind on the subject, nor know what to think or do till I hear following question to Lord Byron:--"I should like to know from you, who of the gayest parties I ever was present at, my fellow-traveller, Mr. Scott, of Gala, and I set off for Scotland, and I never saw Lord Byron these lines had been written long before the appearance of Lord Byron''s the first time that Lord Byron and Mr. Shelley ever met; though, long should write a letter before he took it, when Lord Byron (without, id = 16549 author = Moore, Thomas title = Life of Lord Byron, Vol. 4 With His Letters and Journals date = keywords = Bologna; Byron; Canto; Count; Countess; Don; England; English; Footnote; Gifford; Guiccioli; Hobhouse; Hoppner; Italy; Juan; June; Kinnaird; LETTER; Lady; Lord; MURRAY; Madame; Manfred; Mira; Moore; Mr.; Mrs.; P.S.; Pope; Ravenna; Rome; Scott; Venice; good; italian; time summary = LETTERS AND JOURNALS OF LORD BYRON, WITH NOTICES OF HIS LIFE, from return to Venice in _June_; so, pray, address all letters, &c. Venice, as usual; I mean to return there in ten days. lately; but I shall return back to Venice in a few days, so that if "I returned from Rome two days ago, and have received your letter; good man; but till I know the particulars, I can give no opinion. any dead man of the like name a good deal in debt, pray dig him up, "Next week I shall be obliged to be in Venice to meet Lord Kinnaird [Footnote 7: A country-house on the Euganean hills, near Este, which Mr. Hoppner, who was then the English Consul-General at Venice, had for some [Footnote 34: Though Lord Byron, like most other persons, in writing to Lord Byron, I know not; but he could hardly, I think, had he seen it, id = 16570 author = Moore, Thomas title = Life of Lord Byron, Vol. 2 With His Letters and Journals date = keywords = August; Byron; Childe; Dallas; December; English; Footnote; Giaour; Harold; Hobhouse; Hodgson; Holland; House; James; LETTER; Lady; London; Lord; MOORE; Mr.; Murray; Newstead; November; Rogers; September; Sheridan; Sir; Street; like; lordship; write summary = LETTERS AND JOURNALS OF LORD BYRON, WITH NOTICES OF HIS LIFE, from the some future time, a subject for bards, gave, assuredly, but little hope lines, too, of the "Hints from Horace," addressed evidently to Mr. Hobhouse, Lord Byron not only renders the same justice to his own social given by Lord Byron to a work so little worthy of his genius, over a [Footnote 7: One of the manuscript notes of Lord Byron on Mr. D''Israeli''s work, already referred to.--Vol. i. the poet to be great, the man must suffer, Lord Byron, it must be owned, authority of Lord Byron, rendered it an act of justice to both friends To this letter, Lord Byron returned the following answer:-[Footnote 37: This poem is now printed in Lord Byron''s Works.] Lord Byron says, in a note to Mr. Rogers, "If you think the picture you id = 20879 author = Morley, John title = Critical Miscellanies, Vol. 1, Essay 3: Byron date = keywords = Byron; England; Europe; Revolution; Shakespeare; Shelley; force; man; spirit summary = Criticism not concerned with Byron''s private life 208 Byron has the political quality of Milton and Shakespeare 212 proves the coincidence of Byronic influence with revolutionary movement force of Byron''s genius than that it was able to produce so fine an investigate and judge Byron''s private life, as if the exact manner of between the consciousness of man and all the natural forces of the Byron, on the other hand, is never moved by the strength of his passion the world, than the waste which comes of great men failing in their With Byron, as with some of his prototypes among the men of Byron never did thus know himself, either morally or In Byron''s time the pretensions of the two possible answers to the great for man in transforming human life were not far more transcendently Byron''s passionate feeling for mankind included the long succession of id = 10100 author = Nichol, John title = Byron date = keywords = Byron; Childe; Countess; Don; Dr.; England; Greece; Guiccioli; Harold; Hobhouse; Hunt; Italy; John; Juan; July; Lady; Leigh; London; Lord; Moore; Mr.; Mrs.; Murray; Newstead; Scott; Shelley; Sir; Venice; english; poet; write; year summary = 3. Memoirs of the Life and Writings of the Right Hon. Lord Byron (H. 4. The Life, Writings, Opinions, and Times of G.G. Noel Byron, with 8. The Works of Lord Byron, with Life by Thomas Moore, 17 the half sister and good genius of the poet, whose memory remains like a Mrs. Byron gave birth to her only child, George Gordon, sixth Lord. Of Byron''s early school days there is little further record. following year Mrs. Byron again settled at Nottingham, and in the course son, has thrown light on disputed passages of Lord Byron''s life. with the Regent led to a letter from Sir Walter Scott to Lord Byron, the go.'' ''Then it _shall_ go,'' said Lord Byron, and, in so saying, sealed and all," Byron writes; "he visits me frequently, and takes me out (like poets of the early part of this century, Lord John Russell thought Byron id = 14061 author = Stowe, Harriet Beecher title = Lady Byron Vindicated A history of the Byron controversy from its beginning in 1816 to the present time date = keywords = Anne; Blackwood; Byron; Don; Dr.; England; God; January; Juan; Lady; Leigh; London; Lord; Lushington; Milbanke; Mimms; Miss; Moore; Mr.; Mrs.; Murray; Noctes; North; Sir; letter; life; time summary = THE TRUE STORY OF LADY BYRON''S LIFE (AS ORIGINALLY PUBLISHED IN ''THE We are informed in Moore''s Life what a noble pride of rank Lord Byron particulars of Lord Byron''s misconduct at this time; she gave Lady statements, that, when Lady Byron did speak, she had a story to tell that time to ask leave, the following note from Lady Byron in reply to an ''You said, Mr. Moore, that Lady Byron was unsuitable to her lord: the never loved Lord Byron, or she would not have left him.'' The lady If we consider the character of Lady Byron as given by Mrs. Mimms, that of a young person of warm but repressed feeling, without story by Lady Byron, at a time when she had it in her power to have Lady Byron, as she appeared at this time of her life, in his exquisite ''The separation of Lord and Lady Byron astonished the world, which id = 44791 author = Stowe, Harriet Beecher title = Lady Byron Vindicated: A History of the Byron Controversy date = keywords = Anne; Blackwood; Byron; CHAPTER; Don; Dr.; England; Footnote; God; Juan; Lady; Leigh; London; Lord; Lushington; Milbanke; Miss; Moore; Mr.; Mrs.; Murray; Noctes; North; Sir; letter; life; time summary = THE TRUE STORY OF LADY BYRON''S LIFE (AS ORIGINALLY PUBLISHED We are informed in Moore''s Life what a noble pride of rank Lord Byron subject of the relations of Lord and Lady Byron to the most respectful statements, that, when Lady Byron did speak, she had a story to tell speak of Lady Byron in the right of a man, and of a friend to the time to ask leave, the following note from Lady Byron in reply to an ''You said, Mr. Moore, that Lady Byron was unsuitable to her lord: the The first letter given by ''The Quarterly,'' from Lady Byron to Mrs. Leigh, without a date, evidently belongs to this period, when the before the separation of Lord and Lady Byron, and not feel that the story by Lady Byron, at a time when she had it in her power to have ''The separation of Lord and Lady Byron astonished the world, which