In a book called The Life, Letters and Journals of Lord Byron, written by Thomas Moore, there is an account of Byron’s death which states the following: “It was about six o’clock in the evening of this day when he said, ‘Now I shall go to sleep’; and then turning round fell into that slumber from which he never awoke. For the next twenty-four hours he lay incapable of either sense or motion – with the exception of, now and then, slight symptoms of suffocation, during which his servant raised his head – and at a quarter past six o’ clock on the following day, the 19th, he was seen to open his eyes and immediately shut them again. The physicians felt his pulse – he was no more!” Byron died on April 19, 1824. Now, there is some debate over the …show more content…
Throughout his life, Lord Byron showed how much of a dedicated man he was through his work, and in this research document, I will explain more of his character with regards to his poems, life, letters and …show more content…
The next year, Byron published his second collection, Hours of Idleness, which consisted of many of his early poems as well as significant additions. By his twentieth birthday, he faced overwhelming debt. Even though his second collection initially received a favorable response, a disturbingly negative review was printed in January of 1808, followed by even more criticism a few months later. His response to this was a satire named English Bards and Scotch Reviewers, which received mixed attention. Publicly humiliated and with nowhere else to turn, he set out on a tour of the Mediterranean, traveling to Portugal, Spain, Albania, Turkey, and Athens. Then, enjoying his new-found sexual freedom, Byron decided to stay in Greece to work on some of his poems there. Inspired by the culture around him, he later wrote to his sister, “If I am a poet….the air of Greece has made me