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  2. Lord Byron's Poems Summary and Analysis of Don Juan. Don Juan begins with a dedication to Robert Southey and William Wordsworth—both famous poets of the time, whom Byron lampoons here. The narrator distances himself from these “great” men by insisting that his own muse is of a lesser nature, and so his verse will be lesser as well.

  3. Poem Summary. Don Juan was born in Seville, Spain, the son of Don José, a member of the nobility, and Donna Inez, a woman of considerable learning. Juan's parents did not get along well with each other because Don José was interested in women rather than in knowledge and was unfaithful to Donna Inez. Donna Inez was on the point of suing her ...

  4. Plot Summary. Lord Byron’s Don Juan is a satiric poem inspired by the legendary story of Don Juan, the famous womanizer. Byron, however, changes the focus and paints Don Juan as a figure who is easy prey to women’s romantic advances. The poem consists of sixteen cantos although an unfinished seventeenth was in progress at the time of Byron ...

  5. In English literature, Don Juan, written from 1819 to 1824 by the English poet Lord Byron, is a satirical, epic poem that portrays the Spanish folk legend of Don Juan, not as a womaniser as historically portrayed, but as a victim easily seduced by women.

    • Lord Byron
    • 555 pages
    • 1819
    • 1819–1824 (final cantos published posthumously)
  6. Feb 16, 2021 · Analysis of Lord Byron’s Don Juan. By NASRULLAH MAMBROL on February 16, 2021 • ( 0 ) Don Juan is nowadays regarded as Byron’s crowning achievement and his greatest long poem. Unlike the Satanic self-dramatizing that was the source of his fame in the 19th century, in Manfred and Childe Harold’s Pilgrimage especially, Don Juan shows Byron ...

  7. Don Juan | Plot Summary. Lord Byron prefaces the poem with a dedication in which he references his fellow poets William Wordsworth (1770–1850) and Robert Southey (1774–1843). He does not believe that they are good poets and insists that history will judge them accordingly.

  8. Byron’s Don Juan, the name comically anglicized to rhyme with “new one” and “true one,” is a passive character, in many ways a victim of predatory women, and more of a picaresque hero in...

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