The poet Lord Byron lived a memorable life that included multiple illegitimate children, pet bears, and scandalous memoirs that were never read.
The Daily Campus: This Week in History: The life and times of Lord Byron
Portrait of Lord George Gordon Byron, the sixth Baron Byron. Byron died of illness while training with troops. Photos courtesy of Wikimedia Commons. George Gordon Byron, the sixth Baron Byron, was ...
The name Lord Byron instantly brings to mind scandal, heartbreak, and that unforgettable description: “mad, bad, and dangerous to know.” Those words came from Lady Caroline Lamb herself. When they met ...
"Concerning the job numbers from May, one can almost echo Henry James's exclamation after examining letters pertaining to Lord Byron's incest: 'Nauseating perhaps, but how quite inexpressibly ...
Travel Weekly: 10 Night European Inland Waterways Cruise on the Lord Byron
Travel Weekly: 7 Night European Inland Waterways Cruise on the Lord Byron
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lord_Byron. George Gordon Byron (later Noel), 6th Baron Byron, FRS (22 January 1788 – 19 April ...
The last time Thomas Moore saw George Gordon, Lord Byron was in Venice in 1819, when Byron entrusted to his fellow poet 78 folio sheets containing his memoirs. Moore was a fitting custodian for the ...
The Daily Telegraph: Insane or heroic? Debauched or lonely? Lord Byron in his own words
Insane or heroic? Debauched or lonely? Lord Byron in his own words
Group 1 winner Gordon Lord Byron works after racing under Wayne Lordan Roscommon 29.09.2014 Patrick McCann/Racing Post Gordon Lord Byron (William Buick) wins the Prix de la Foret from Penitent ...