Obrazy na stronie
PDF
ePub
[graphic]

66

The church of St. Mark-which stands hard by

With fretted pinnacles on high,

And Cupola and minaret."

Venice, p. 8.

WITH BYRON IN ITALY

THE YEARS 1817, 1818, 1819

A

VENICE

INTRODUCTORY

RRIVING in Venice late in the year 1816, this city became at once to Byron the “fairy city of his heart." Her canals, her gondolas, her streets, her bridges, palaces, balconies, piazzas, carnivals, pictures, politics, history, - all appealed to his poetic imagination and reckless mood of the moment. The fragment Venice " (p. 7) probably was the first poetic expression of his feelings, although it lay in manuscript nearly ninety years, to be published first in our own century.

66

In almost his first letter to his publisher, John Murray, he writes to ask that he will send him an English prose work called " View of Italy," for the sake of securing certain facts for his own poetical purposes. He has seen the black veil painted over the place where the picture of Marino Faliero should appear among the Doges, the Giant's Staircase, where he was crowned and discrowned and decapitated, but can find no good account in Venice of that Doge and

an

his conspiracy, or the motives for it. He has determined to write a tragedy having the fiery character and strange story of Faliero for its subject, undertaking requiring so much research, however, that it was four years before the work was completed. The story of another Doge, Francis Foscari, and his son Jacopo, also appealed to him, although the publication of "The Two Foscari" likewise was deferred some years. The indignant "Ode to Venice" shows how he took to heart her servile condition, while its spirited appeal at the close expresses what is revealed also at other times and places - Byron's admiration of America and American liberty,

"better be

Where the extinguish'd Spartans still are free,
In their proud charnel of Thermopyla,
Than stagnate on our marsh — or, o'er the deep

Fly, and one current to the ocean add,

One spirit to the souls our fathers had,

One freeman more, America, to thee!"

A visit which Byron made to Rome in the spring of 1817, stopping at Foligno, Ferrara, and Florence on the way, resulted in several poems. Ferrara and Tasso's prison cell there inspired the fine "Lament of Tasso "; the Coliseum and the Palaces of the Cæsars at Rome suggested one of the choicest passages of the third act of "Manfred," which he had brought to Italy in an unfinished state; the fourth, last, and best canto of " Childe Harold's Pilgrimage, dealing with the feelings and thoughts of this rapid

66

journey, was thrown off at a white heat, a poem of one hundred and thirty stanzas, afterwards increased to one hundred and eighty-six, being written in thirtythree days immediately upon his return to Venice. Beppo," Byron's first attempt in the mock-heroic style, of which mention already has been made; "Mazeppa," perhaps the best known of all his tales in verse, and the first four cantos of "Don Juan" also belong to the Venice period.

It is difficult to reconcile the tale of such a long and brilliant list of masterpieces, to say nothing of his study of the Armenian language, "in order to have something craggy to break his mind on," with the parallel tales reporting his depraved and sensual life at this time. But such unwilling witnesses as his guests, — Shelley, whose admiration of Byron's poetry was excessive, Thomas Moore, his enthusiastic biographer, Hobhouse, his life-long friend, to say nothing of Byron's own letters from Venice, are not to be gainsaid. The French traveller, Henri Beyle, however, attributes Byron's reputation to English stupidity; and after going into raptures over his personal charms and into rage over the injustice done him, adds: “If at the age of twenty-eight, when he can already reproach himself with having written six volumes of the finest poetry, it had been possible thoroughly to know the world, he would have been aware that in the nineteenth century there is but one alternative, to be a blockhead or a monster.

[ocr errors]
[ocr errors]

Were

« PoprzedniaDalej »