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<h2> BYRON AND THE COUNTESS GUICCIOLI </h2>
<p>In 1812, when he was in his twenty-fourth year, Lord Byron was more talked
of than any other man in London. He was in the first flush of his
brilliant career, having published the early cantos of "Childe Harold."
Moreover, he was a peer of the realm, handsome, ardent, and possessing a
personal fascination which few men and still fewer women could resist.</p>
<p>Byron's childhood had been one to excite in him strong feelings of revolt,
and he had inherited a profligate and passionate nature. His father was a
gambler and a spendthrift. His mother was eccentric to a degree. Byron
himself, throughout his boyish years, had been morbidly sensitive because
of a physical deformity—a lame, misshapen foot. This and the strange
treatment which his mother accorded him left him headstrong, wilful,
almost from the first an enemy to whatever was established and
conventional.</p>
<p>As a boy, he was remarkable for the sentimental attachments which he
formed. At eight years of age he was violently in love with a young girl
named Mary Duff. At ten his cousin, Margaret Parker, excited in him a
strange, un-childish passion. At fifteen came one of the greatest crises
of his life, when he became enamored of Mary Chaworth, whose grand-father
had been killed in a duel by Byron's great-uncle. Young as he was, he
would have married her immediately; but Miss Chaworth was two years older
than he, and absolutely refused to take seriously the devotion of a
school-boy.</p>
<p>Byron felt the disappointment keenly; and after a short stay at Cambridge,
he left England, visited Portugal and Spain, and traveled eastward as far
as Greece and Turkey. At Athens he wrote the pretty little poem to the
"maid of Athens"—Miss Theresa Macri, daughter of the British
vice-consul. He returned to London to become at one leap the most admired
poet of the day and the greatest social favorite. He was possessed of
striking personal beauty. Sir Walter Scott said of him: "His countenance
was a thing to dream of." His glorious eyes, his mobile, eloquent face,
fascinated all; and he was, besides, a genius of the first rank.</p>
<p>With these endowments, he plunged into the social whirlpool, denying
himself nothing, and receiving everything-adulation, friendship, and
unstinted love. Darkly mysterious stories of his adventures in the East
made many think that he was the hero of some of his own poems, such as
"The Giaour" and "The Corsair." A German wrote of him that "he was
positively besieged by women." From the humblest maid-servants up to
ladies of high rank, he had only to throw his handkerchief to make a
conquest. Some women did not even wait for the handkerchief to be thrown.
No wonder that he was sated with so much adoration and that he wrote of
women:</p>
<p>I regard them as very pretty but inferior creatures. I look on them as
grown-up children; but, like a foolish mother, I am constantly the slave
of one of them. Give a woman a looking-glass and burnt almonds, and she
will be content.</p>
<p>The liaison which attracted the most attention at this time was that
between Byron and Lady Caroline Lamb. Byron has been greatly blamed for
his share in it; but there is much to be said on the other side. Lady
Caroline was happily married to the Right Hon. William Lamb, afterward
Lord Melbourne, and destined to be the first prime minister of Queen
Victoria. He was an easy-going, genial man of the world who placed too
much confidence in the honor of his wife. She, on the other hand, was a
sentimental fool, always restless, always in search of some new
excitement. She thought herself a poet, and scribbled verses, which her
friends politely admired, and from which they escaped as soon as possible.
When she first met Byron, she cried out: "That pale face is my fate!" And
she afterward added: "Mad, bad, and dangerous to know!"</p>
<p>It was not long before the intimacy of the two came very near the point of
open scandal; but Byron was the wooed and not the wooer. This woman, older
than he, flung herself directly at his head. Naturally enough, it was not
very long before she bored him thoroughly. Her romantic impetuosity became
tiresome, and very soon she fell to talking always of herself, thrusting
her poems upon him, and growing vexed and peevish when he would not praise
them. As was well said, "he grew moody and she fretful when their mutual
egotisms jarred."</p>
<p>In a burst of resentment she left him, but when she returned, she was
worse than ever. She insisted on seeing him. On one occasion she made her
way into his rooms disguised as a boy. At another time, when she thought
he had slighted her, she tried to stab herself with a pair of scissors.
Still later, she offered her favors to any one who would kill him. Byron
himself wrote of her:</p>
<p>You can have no idea of the horrible and absurd things that she has said
and done.</p>
<p>Her story has been utilized by Mrs. Humphry Ward in her novel, "The
Marriage of William Ashe."</p>
<p>Perhaps this trying experience led Byron to end his life of dissipation.
At any rate, in 1813, he proposed marriage to Miss Anne Millbanke, who at
first refused him; but he persisted, and in 1815 the two were married.
Byron seems to have had a premonition that he was making a terrible
mistake. During the wedding ceremony he trembled like a leaf, and made the
wrong responses to the clergyman. After the wedding was over, in handing
his bride into the carriage which awaited them, he said to her:</p>
<p>"Miss Millbanke, are you ready?"</p>
<p>It was a strange blunder for a bridegroom, and one which many regarded at
the time as ominous for the future. In truth, no two persons could have
been more thoroughly mismated—Byron, the human volcano, and his
wife, a prim, narrow-minded, and peevish woman. Their incompatibility was
evident enough from the very first, so that when they returned from their
wedding-journey, and some one asked Byron about his honeymoon, he
answered:</p>
<p>"Call it rather a treacle moon!"</p>
<p>It is hardly necessary here to tell over the story of their domestic
troubles. Only five weeks after their daughter's birth, they parted. Lady
Byron declared that her husband was insane; while after trying many times
to win from her something more than a tepid affection, he gave up the task
in a sort of despairing anger. It should be mentioned here, for the
benefit of those who recall the hideous charges made many decades
afterward by Mrs. Harriet Beecher Stowe on the authority of Lady Byron,
that the latter remained on terms of friendly intimacy with Augusta Leigh,
Lord Byron's sister, and that even on her death-bed she sent an amicable
message to Mrs. Leigh.</p>
<p>Byron, however, stung by the bitter attacks that were made upon him, left
England, and after traveling down the Rhine through Switzerland, he took
up his abode in Venice. His joy at leaving England and ridding himself of
the annoyances which had clustered thick about him, he expressed in these
lines:</p>
<p>Once more upon the waters! yet once more!<br/>
And the waves bound beneath me as a steed<br/>
That knows his rider. Welcome to the roar!<br/></p>
<p>Meanwhile he enjoyed himself in reckless fashion. Money poured in upon him
from his English publisher. For two cantos of "Childe Harold" and
"Manfred," Murray paid him twenty thousand dollars. For the fourth canto,
Byron demanded and received more than twelve thousand dollars. In Italy he
lived on friendly terms with Shelley and Thomas Moore; but eventually he
parted from them both, for he was about to enter upon a new phase of his
curious career.</p>
<p>He was no longer the Byron of 1815. Four years of high living and much
brandy-and-water had robbed his features of their refinement. His look was
no longer spiritual. He was beginning to grow stout. Yet the change had
not been altogether unfortunate. He had lost something of his wild
impetuosity, and his sense of humor had developed. In his thirtieth year,
in fact, he had at last become a man.</p>
<p>It was soon after this that he met a woman who was to be to him for the
rest of his life what a well-known writer has called "a star on the stormy
horizon of the poet." This woman was Teresa, Countess Guiccioli, whom he
first came to know in Venice. She was then only nineteen years of age, and
she was married to a man who was more than forty years her senior. Unlike
the typical Italian woman, she was blonde, with dreamy eyes and an
abundance of golden hair, and her manner was at once modest and graceful.
She had known Byron but a very short time when she found herself thrilling
with a passion of which until then she had never dreamed. It was written
of her:</p>
<p>She had thought of love but as an amusement; yet she now became its slave.</p>
<p>To this love Byron gave an immediate response, and from that time until
his death he cared for no other woman. The two were absolutely mated.
Nevertheless, there were difficulties which might have been expected.
Count Guiccioli, while he seemed to admire Byron, watched him with Italian
subtlety. The English poet and the Italian countess met frequently. When
Byron was prostrated by an attack of fever, the countess remained beside
him, and he was just recovering when Count Guiccioli appeared upon the
scene and carried off his wife. Byron was in despair. He exchanged the
most ardent letters with the countess, yet he dreaded assassins whom he
believed to have been hired by her husband. Whenever he rode out, he went
armed with sword and pistols.</p>
<p>Amid all this storm and stress, Byron's literary activity was remarkable.
He wrote some of his most famous poems at this time, and he hoped for the
day when he and the woman whom he loved might be united once for all. This
came about in the end through the persistence of the pair. The Countess
Guiccioli openly took up her abode with him, not to be separated until the
poet sailed for Greece to aid the Greeks in their struggle for
independence. This was in 1822, when Byron was in his thirty-fifth year.
He never returned to Italy, but died in the historic land for which he
gave his life as truly as if he had fallen upon the field of battle.</p>
<p>Teresa Guiccioli had been, in all but name, his wife for just three years.
Much, has been said in condemnation of this love-affair; but in many ways
it is less censurable than almost anything in his career. It was an
instance of genuine love, a love which purified and exalted this man of
dark and moody moments. It saved him from those fitful passions and orgies
of self-indulgence which had exhausted him. It proved to be an inspiration
which at last led him to die for a cause approved by all the world.</p>
<p>As for the woman, what shall we say of her? She came to him unspotted by
the world. A demand for divorce which her husband made was rejected. A
pontifical brief pronounced a formal separation between the two. The
countess gladly left behind "her palaces, her equipages, society, and
riches, for the love of the poet who had won her heart."</p>
<p>Unlike the other women who had cared for him, she was unselfish in her
devotion. She thought more of his fame than did he himself. Emilio
Castelar has written:</p>
<p>She restored him and elevated him. She drew him from the mire and set the
crown of purity upon his brow. Then, when she had recovered this great
heart, instead of keeping it as her own possession, she gave it to
humanity.</p>
<p>For twenty-seven years after Byron's death, she remained, as it were,
widowed and alone. Then, in her old age, she married the Marquis de
Boissy; but the marriage was purely one of convenience. Her heart was
always Byron's, whom she defended with vivacity. In 1868, she published
her memoirs of the poet, filled with interesting and affecting
recollections. She died as late as 1873.</p>
<p>Some time between the year 1866 and that of her death, she is said to have
visited Newstead Abbey, which had once been Byron's home. She was very
old, a widow, and alone; but her affection for the poet-lover of her youth
was still as strong as ever.</p>
<p>Byron's life was short, if measured by years only. Measured by
achievement, it was filled to the very full. His genius blazes like a
meteor in the records of English poetry; and some of that splendor gleams
about the lovely woman who turned him away from vice and folly and made
him worthy of his historic ancestry, of his country, and of himself.</p>
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