Lord Byron and Emily Bronte are two of the most influential and vital literary figures in the English literature and the movement of romanticism which corresponds to the 19th in Britain. Romanticism was a new phenomenon at the time and it was defying the ground rules and set ways of thinking, according to this new movement; the individual was more important than the society and the usage of reason and realism were downgraded (Rahn par. 2). ‘Melancholy’ was enjoyed and sought after because it was thought to be enhancing one’s creative potential and as a crucial point; an idealized, a simpler past was seeked because England was going through Industrial Revolution and many severe paradigm shifts that’s why Romantic poets tended towards medievalism, …show more content…
It is seen in Lord Byron’s works that he has been under the clear influence of John Milton, for example it is possible to see distinct traces of similarity between Paradise Lost and Cain: A Mystery in which Lord Byron interweaves once again the tempted and the tempter with eloquent and skeptical dialectic discourses in a deft way (Chen 1). Byron asserts his own interpretation of Paradise Lost in his work presenting a Lucifer who achieved personal liberty returning to heaven with rediscovered confidence and rationalism (Feldkamp 41). Cain: A Mystery looks like a sequel because it starts where Paradise Lost leaves off (Feldkamp 42). Byron embodied and made use of Romanticism in parallel to Milton’s Satan in Paradise Lost, his characters echo and remind the readers of Milton’s Satan because of the quest for personal freedom, search for the truth in the world and the feeling of questioning the dogmas and ground rules (Feldkamp 40). In both of the texts, a figure who thinks rationally, questioning and defying authority unwilling to abide by tyranny is portrayed and presented (Feldkamp 45). As Fred Parker describes and analyzes Byron’s literary figures in terms of Romanticism he