Dan Snow's History Hit - The Scandalous Life of Lord Byron
Episode Date: May 4, 2026WARNING: This episode includes discussion of sexual abuse and explicit language. He appalled and titillated Regency polite society in equal measure. Lord Byron was a poet, a lover, a rebel, a romantic..., an appalling husband and eventually a freedom fighter. He made terrible decisions, was notoriously bad-tempered and treated women and men appallingly. Yet, everybody who met him fell in love with him.Dan is joined by Dr Kate Lister, historian and host of the Betwixt the Sheets podcast, to unravel the many phases and contradictions of Lord Byron's complicated life in an attempt to discover the man behind the scandalous reputation.Produced by Mariana Des Forges and edited by Dougal Patmore.We need your help! Let us know what you want from Dan Snow's History Hit by filling in our anonymous survey here: https://forms.gle/PvgayWLkWGjYT4St6Dan Snow's History Hit is now available on YouTube! Check it out at: https://www.youtube.com/@DSHHPodcastSign up to History Hit for hundreds of hours of original documentaries, with a new release every week and ad-free podcasts. Sign up at https://www.historyhit.com/subscribe.You can also email the podcast directly at ds.hh@historyhit.com. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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Hi everyone, welcome Dan Snow's History.
We're going to be talking about of history's greatest headline makers, the original celebrity bad boy.
Yes, yes, it's time. We're going there.
Today, we're talking about Lord Byron, poet, politician of sorts, lover, exile, self-starred rebel, romantic, hideous,
hideous partner, and eventually freedom fighter.
He appalled and titillated Regency Britain's polite society.
He set hard to racing.
He managed to keep a bear as a pet,
and he just made lots of really, really terrible decisions,
and yet strangely made them look glamorous at the same time.
He was born into a Britain that was experiencing multiple revolutions,
the industrial revolution, huge leaps in technology,
changes in the way that people lived.
people were becoming subordinated for machines, people were leaving the countryside and entering these
massive, dark, smoky cities. There were questions about how we ought to organize ourselves in this
new world, who should get the profit, who should get the surplus value from all this labour,
and whether these new workers deserved protections, deserved rights. Across the channel,
there was another revolution brewing, and the French Revolution, a complete overhaul of France's
society, aristocrats losing their head, talk of freedom.
and equality and liberty.
Byron managed to somehow come to embody all of these revolutions
whilst remaining quintessentially the aristocratic writ as well.
He is an impossible tangle of contradictions.
He was witty, he was brilliant, in fact.
He was politically engaged.
He was a best-selling poet.
His verses were deeply stirring to people.
He was also vulnerable, cruel, anxious, traumatised,
jealous, ambitious, he was all the things. And to help us make sense that, because we're tackling
the poster boy for sex and scandal and regency society, there is only one person on this earth
breathing today who can do justice to this story. And that is the inimitable Kate Lister.
Dr. Kate Lister, historian, host of our sister podcast betwixt the sheets. So lace up your
true, pull up your stockings, buckle on your sword, because we are heading back to the
the 18th century to meet the poet who lived fast, loved hard and died young. Lord Byron,
who was he, the man behind the headlines? And did he deserve that epic reputation?
One of the greatest obituaries ever written that he was mad, bad and dangerous to know.
Let's find out. You're listening to Dan Snow's history. We'll get into it.
Kate, how you doing? Good to see you. I'm doing fabulously well.
The house of Byron, I mean, they were all wrongans, weren't they?
Yeah, yeah, they really were. The further you go,
the matter they get.
Yeah, I know.
And actually, weirdly,
our Byron was probably the most centrist dad of them all.
And that's saying something.
Yeah.
And his mum's family,
they were pretty bonkers as well.
Were they?
Yeah, quite a high rate of suicide.
He had like an aunt that killed herself
and then some paternal,
yeah, there's quite a lot of mental instability kicking around.
Right.
I mean, frankly, if I lived before modern medicine,
dentistry, you know, food, etc.,
I think I'd have mental instability.
I genuinely, I find the ability of humans to survive in these,
the kind of things we're going to talk about,
the kind of situations people are thrown into, you know,
losing half your kids when they're, you know, before the age of 10.
I just think the mental instability must have been endemic.
Yeah, I would have thought so.
Quite how we've even made it as a race is pretty impressive.
But when you look at some of the obstacles, these people were overcoming
and just the kind of horror that was pretty much standard in everyday life,
yeah, it's a wonder anyone was sane.
But I like to think maybe there was one or two sane Byron's.
never made the news.
Yes.
So just like, you know,
tended little herb garden
and were perfectly well adjusted.
Right.
And the problem is,
is we're not making the podcast about them.
You know,
therein lies the problem, right?
No.
Yeah.
So anyway,
talk about the Byron family.
We've sort of talked a little bit about it.
But I mean,
are they a grand friend?
Were they famous before our Byron came along?
Yeah, they were.
They were.
His dad was known as Mad Jack Byron,
who was a notorious Scaliwag.
He has the title and also a bit of incest
with his own sister.
that's kind of kicking around this fact. Yeah, yeah, yeah, it's all a bit like that. But it was more
his mother, who was an aristocrat, sort of low-level aristocrat from Scotland, that's where
their peerage came from. So he's really, the aristocratic bit comes more from his mother. His
grandfather, paternal grandfather, was, I don't want to say naval person, but he was famous for
being shipwrecked a lot. He was known as Bad Weather, Byron. He was shipwrecked, and there's a story
about how he had to eat his dog's paws after they'd been buried for several weeks. It's a
whole thing. But Byron grows up with stories of these legends around him and they have a quite
profound impact on his grandfather goes on Anson's voyage around the world. And he had a terrible
reputation, Admiral Byron, foul weather jack, didn't he? So they all seem to have nicknames and they all
seem to have endless scrapes with death. Endless scrapes with death, addiction issues,
mental health issues, terrible womanising, a spot of incest thrown in. There's some speculation about
whether or not our Byron's dad actually took his own life or whether it was all a terrible
accident. But by the time he dies, he's living in penury. And I think it was France because
he had to flee his creditors. Yeah, it's all a mess. My goodness, the misery of having
dying in France. I mean, it's one thing to be poverty-stricken. And so a very, very
turbulent family, very colourful, you might say, but also turbulent and colourful times. I mean,
this is the end of the 18th century. We've got all the isms coming in. We've got, you know,
French Revolution. We've got ideas around democracy and ideas, dare we even say, about
feminism. We've had the American Revolution. It is a tumultuous time. Yeah, it absolutely is.
Byron is born one year before the French Revolution kicks off. And he's very much a child of the
revolution of these new ideas that are sweeping the world that maybe we could do things differently.
Maybe it doesn't have to be the way it's always been and there's challenges to religion and religious
authority and the status quo and all of that is in the background. Of course, Byron is ultimately
a massively privileged upper class man walking around, talking about revolution, but still,
this is the background. Is dad and mum together when he was born? I mean, obviously they were
together nine months before he was born, but no. No, they were words. They absolutely were not.
His dad married his mum. It's his second marriage. His first marriage. She dies. I think she dies.
It might be in childbirth or just shortly after.
The first marriage, they have a daughter together, Augusta,
she will come back to this story.
His second marriage to Catherine Byron's mum was pretty much exclusively for her money.
He was skint.
He'd spent everything.
He was horribly in debt.
So he marries her to get access to her fortune, promptly spends it,
and then runs up enormous debts again and then legs it.
And he does that really, really quickly.
So when Byron is born, he's not around.
She gives birth not completely on her own,
because there's a midwife there and a doctor, but it's above a shop in London. He's not there for that.
Okay. So his mother has been ruined by her marriage to this man. Does Byron grow up in,
he's upper class. He's descended from aristocrats on both sides, but does he grow up in
straightened circumstances? He does, he does. He's that kind of aristocratic poverty. They've got
the name, they've got the title that they can sort of trade on to get money and creditors,
but they are skinty poor.
They really are.
They're living above shops.
They are relying on handouts from family members.
She is very much a single mother.
They are on their uppers.
It's not a good time, the early childhood.
And he's in Aberdeen.
They moved from London to Aberdeen.
So it's possible that Adult Byron would have had a slight Scottish lilt when he spoke
to you.
Certainly there's some early poems that we have when he was about 10 or 11,
and he writes in a Scottish dialect.
He talks about come see Tway Laddies with.
Tway Club foot as they walk up Broad Street. So he might have had a slight Scottish lilt.
Do we think this experience, we can't psychoanalyze him at this distance, but what does he tell
us about this childhood and how do you think it might have shaped him?
One thing that you will notice about Byron all the way through his life is he is very conscious
of not having super aristocratic background, that he does come from, not poverty, because he's got
the name, but this is not a salubrious upbringing. So he will. He will.
have been aware of the need for money all of his life and kind of that slight inferiority complex.
But it all changes when he's 10 and his great uncle dies and he inherits the title and he
inherits the property portfolio, the whole lot at 10. So they go from just living in rented
accommodation around Aberdeen to boom, you've got an abbey now, sunshine. That is the funny thing
about the aristocracy. Like some random uncle dies and you just go, oh, sorry, you're now
unbelievably wealthy. You're a lord now as well. You're a lord. You're a lord.
He's a full lord.
Full Lord.
And we just got quickly got a pause on the fact.
We're introducing yet another wild character here.
He's inherited from his uncle who was called the wicked Lord Byron.
Anything proven gossip around devil worship, or geez?
I mean, the full works.
I don't know if anything's been proven, but he was clearly not a very nice man.
And it's the fact I think that what Byron inherits from this uncle is Newstead Abbey.
I don't know if you've ever been there.
It's in Nottingham.
I have been.
It's lovely, yeah.
Got quite a got a gothic feel to it, though, doesn't it?
It does.
Doesn't it?
If you're going to have satanic orgies, that's the place that you're going to do these things.
I'll take your word for that.
Would you not?
No, a bit of an effort.
But if you were going to, that might be the place that you would do that kind of thing.
If, big if.
Yes.
If I was going to fictionly set these satanic orgies somewhere, it would be there.
You're right, exactly.
Right.
So, and when he inherits it, it's not in great shape.
It's already looking like it's gothic and kind of crumbling.
But Byron really really.
He loves that when he goes to visit at 10 because it's already imprinted that gothic, crumbling, ruined, former glory. This is the site of many a horrendous and spooky event. He absolutely loves that and it stays with him all of his life, even though he never lived there for any great length of time. But it's a source of income. Him and his mom can return to the south and live a life that...
They rented out is what they do. That's how they turned Nostadabby into some money in the early days. They've got other properties that they're
stay at as well. Of course, the other thing that when he comes into his inheritance, it gives him
the opportunity to do is get more money on credit, because now money lenders will lend to him.
So he's in debt most of his life. He's always fleeing creditors. If there's one thing that
Byron does a lot of it, spend. He spends a lot of money and he spends on mad things.
Well, come on to some of those. Yeah, we will. So he moves from his school in Aberdeen to
fancy schools down south. He goes to Harrow, doesn't he? And Harrow, of course he does.
a young gentleman, he will go to Harrow, where he is addressed as a lord as well.
Right, exactly. Little Lord Byron, and I'm sure that he wasn't alone.
Little Lord Byron. But one thing that we should talk about him is that, because this is quite
formative to his character and his life experience as well, is that he did have a disability.
It's often referred to as a club foot. Scholars aren't quite sure if that is what it really,
really was, but there was some kind of disability that meant that he limped his entire life,
that when he was very, very young, his father in the letters that he was writing said that he didn't
believe his son, George, was Byron's name, would ever walk properly. Some biographers that I've read
have thought it was a kind of dyspasia where the bones don't form quickly. He had a really,
really weak leg. And most scholars think that it's his right leg, although there was disagreement
even when Byron was alive. So he has to wear these specially made shoes and boots that have got
like really hardcore contraptions to constrict his legs. So he was in pain a lot of
and he's very self-conscious about this.
Okay.
And he may be using alcohol and opiates to take the edge off some of that pain.
Of course he is.
But this also makes things.
So he's now a lord, but he's gone from living above a shop to being a lord.
He's now throwing his weight around.
But he's also very aware of this disability,
which the other kids at Harrow mock him for quite mercilessly.
He's been teased for his entire life.
Things like he can't play cricket.
Well, he does play cricket, but he has to have someone to do the runs for him.
So he's always aware of this physical disability that he has.
Did he start writing at Arrow?
He's writing all the time.
There's sort of like juvenile verses that we have.
But I don't think when he's at Harrow, he has any inkling of,
I'm going to be a great poet and a great scholar.
That's just what young gentleman did,
is they wrote poems about things.
Okay.
He goes up to Cambridge.
Yes.
He wants to go to Oxford, but they won't take him.
Yeah, well, there you go.
and so he ends up at the other place.
And what's university like?
I mean, does one have the sexual and other awakenings
that you might associate with going to university now?
Well, one of the most interesting things about university
at this particular time, at least in Cambridge,
was that if you're a member of the aristocracy, which he is,
you didn't have to sit in the exams.
It didn't matter.
You'd have nothing to pass.
So you could just literally go there and drink
and carrows your way through town
and just have a jolly old time of it,
which is exactly what he did.
This is most certainly a time of,
sexual awakening for Byron. Although one of the things that we should definitely mention is that he
would later record his first sexual experience was actually one of abuse, a nanny that was hired to
look after him called May Gray, who was this pious, religious, I think it's Lutheran, Scottish,
like really went to town or all this religious stuff in his day-to-day life, but was sexually
abusing him at night. He would later write that she would come into his room at night and play
tricks with his person. He was about 10 when that was happening. So that was likely his first
sexual experience. I would imagine that one of the things that he found most confusing was that this
was a woman that would beat him for being a sinful boy all day long and then at night would come in
and sexually abuse him. It's difficult to say what impact this had on Byron, but reading back
through all of the archive and the letters and everything that we've got surrounding him, I don't think he
liked women very much, which sounds really counterintuitive because he has this reputation for having
sex with absolutely anything that would move. And that is well deserved. But I think that he liked
men a lot more than he liked women. By the time he gets to Harrow and then later Cambridge,
he is realizing that he has sexual feelings for men, very strong sexual feelings for men as well.
It must have been very confusing for him. But it's when he's at Cambridge that we get the strongest
evidence of his first gay relationships. I think he'd get angry at women a lot. He often found them
grotesque. And I wouldn't be surprised if that could be traced back to this early abuse that he
experienced. Well, that shouldn't come as surprised today. We're living in this sort of avalanche of
the manosphere, these strange male influences who seem to despise women apart from when they want to have
sex them. Yeah, that's Byron. That's him. He loves them. He can fall in love with them. He
certainly finds them sexually attractive. I think that there are some cases in his whole life where he did
love women, but he also gets very frustrated. He also finds them grotesque. He gets bored of them very
quickly. I think that he wants to be around men. He much prefers the company and the sexual company of
men. He is very good looking, is he? Yes, he is. He's a haughty. He's very pale in his appearance,
which was considered very attractive at the time. He's got these big eyes. His face was always
described as being almost cherubic. And in some accounts, he's described as looking very feminine,
like a woman, but he is, absolutely everyone says that he is very, very beautiful.
And he actually describes himself, right? He says that he's quite moody. He is this OG
kind of romantic, gothic emo figure, isn't he? Because he's sort of beautiful and complicated
and very, very moody. Damaged. Damaged, yeah. And intensely emotional. And he forms
attachments to people very, very deeply. And everybody pretty much, apart from a few accounts of
people that went, I thought he was a right poser, but pretty much everybody falls in love with this man,
men, women, it doesn't matter. He has friends that last throughout his entire lifetime, despite the
fact that he treats them really badly, but everyone is enamored of this person. He is beautiful. He is
intelligent. He is deeply emotional. He's highly creative, but also he's damaged and he needs help,
and I can save him. And it's just that catnip, that tortured artist image. He was the OG of that.
And so there is a sort of, it's anachronistic, but this idea of a celebrity culture in Georgian England during the Napoleonic Wars, so in early 19th century, he is just a sort of, what, a dashing figure in London society that everyone knows and wants to know. A, he's got the looks and the charisma, but also is he impressing people with his poetry at this point, his writing? So has he got it just all going on. He's got everything. He does. He's also a scallywagon behaves really badly to people. We often forget that in the mix because it's so easy to be.
bedazzled by him. But he is writing poetry. His big hit comes in 1812 when he's been off on his
grand tour around Europe, which was basically him going out there for sexual tourism. But he had
been publishing poetry before that. So he publishes small collections of poems, which are relatively
well received apart from one or two people that slag it off. And he gets so upset that he's been
badly criticised by one or two people, that his next volume of poetry is one just attacking English.
and Scottish critics. He just absolutely goes to town and rips them to shreds. He just goes on the
offensive. We've all been there. We've all been there. Right? But like, you're not supposed to
respond to criticism. We're supposed to be dignified and like rise above it. And he publishes this entire
collection of just basically going, yeah, well, you're all dicks and idiots and I'm a genius.
That's pretty much what he does. And then he swans off to Europe. But it's there that he writes
his big hit and it's called Child Harold's Pilgrimage. And it's about a young man who goes to Greece,
and to Turkey and explores and experiences emotional awakening and it's all erotic.
And funnily enough, people thought that that might have been semi-autobiographical.
So the world just goes nuts for this.
It was called Byronomania at the time.
And this collection of, it sounds so strange now, a collection of poems would do that
because I don't remember the last time a collection of poems would do that.
But his does.
It's like a rock star dropping an album that everybody can't stop talking about.
Listen to Dan Snow's history, we're talking about Byron more coming up.
And this is what difficult for some people listening, because they think, well, hang on, we're moving into the 19th century.
I associate the 19th century of quite strict moral codes and huge penalties and punishments of sex outside marriage.
So is this a subculture? Is this like the 60s? Are there sort of two different versions of society at the moment?
There's the stuff going on the King's Road and elsewhere and then the vast mass of people who live by complete different rules?
I mean, who's his sensation with?
And is he just prurins?
They're like, I can't believe what this guy's getting up to.
Or are these people who share his ideas of sort of free love and living in a different way?
Well, when you read Child Howell's Pilgrimage, you'll probably be a bit disappointed with it
because you come to it thinking it's going to be like some rock and roll memoir of debauchery and excess.
And it's really like a meditation on the emotional experiences of traveling through Europe.
You're like, where's the sex?
But at the time, it just lit the fuse paper.
of this emotional backdrop that was happening in London at time.
Maybe it was all the revolutions that had been happening,
the Enlightenment's being ushered in,
and then suddenly there's this voice about this man
that's very in touch with his emotional, erotic and sexual awakening.
And it was a huge hit, mostly with the aristocracy,
because its first edition, which sold out in days, by the way,
that cost, I think it was 50 shillings to buy that,
the first edition of it.
So these are rich people who are buying this.
And to answer your other question,
Yeah, there were very strict moral rules at the time, but who those rules applied to and how they were applied is a whole other discussion.
If you are very, very, very rich member of the aristocracy, you can cover yourself pretty well because you've got the money in the space to be able to get away from scandal.
But that doesn't mean you're immune to it.
And Byron, when he goes on his grand tour, he deliberately goes to Greece and to Turkey and to Armenia because he knows that these are cultures where homosexual relationships are.
are not only not taboo, but quite open.
He writes in his letters at the time, that's what he's going for.
And we can't flinch away from it, is that he wanted to have sex with young men.
He referred to them as hyacinths in his many, many letters to his friends,
that he was going to go and pick as many higher cents as he could,
and he was going to call these higher cents.
Are they calling themselves the romantics, these poems?
Are they young men out there writing sort of romantic poetry?
And roughly speaking, what does that involve?
I always associate it with going on long walks through wild,
landscapes, somehow breaking free of the moral strictures of society and getting back to an earthier,
more sexual, more real sort of self. Is that roughly speaking? Yes, that's pretty much what
they're doing. So you've got to imagine that romanticism is born out of the Enlightenment movement,
which leads up to the French Revolution, the American Revolution. And there's a heavy emphasis on
rationality, despite the fact that these revolutions were often very irrational. But it was like,
We want to do away with medieval superstition and belief in folklore and magic.
We're people of science and where people of rational principles.
And it was really built on that.
So the romantics come along to counteract that.
They are about like, okay, well, rational and reason is a great thing.
But what about emotions?
What about how you feel?
What about your imagination and how that is unlimited?
So they're pushing back against this very, no, we want rational sense and reason of the Enlightenment.
So the romantics come in and now there's a heavy emphasis on imagination, passion.
They took a lot of solace in nature and the natural world because the revolutions that are
coming up and it's the start of the industrial revolution as well.
That was quite scary.
So finding solace in nature, the idea that we go back to how we naturally were.
And obviously sex is in that mix as well.
That's what the romantic poets were largely about.
There were other people writing at the time, Wordsworth and Coleridge in particular, and Byron
shits all over them.
He thinks it's really funny.
If you want someone to say something nasty about someone at the time, go to Byron.
It was merciless about absolutely everybody.
He called Wordsworth Tirdsworth.
He said that Keats wrote pisser bed poetry.
He said it was mental masturbation.
He's just merciless.
So I don't know if he considered himself part of this movement.
But he was aware he was a writer and that there was sort of a new surge of interest in it.
But he definitely thought of himself as the best.
He had an affair, didn't he with laid a lady?
Caroline Lamb, who was married to the man who would become the Prime Minister,
Vicent Melbourne.
He had so many affairs, Dan, it's ridiculous.
She's rather remarkable.
She's an author, and obviously she had an affair with Duke of Wellington, which is cool,
and her brother was badly injured at the Battle of Waterloo.
Anyway, so she's got an interesting family and interesting career.
She writes novels.
Is it true?
She comes up with that unbelievably famous quote about Byron.
Mad, bad and dangerous to know.
Yes, she did.
She wrote that.
completely fair. I'm not sure that you couldn't say that about Caroline Lamb herself.
I mean, I've got a lot of sympathy for the thousands of broken hearts that Byron seems to
leave in his wake. But Caroline just like, wow, the behaviour is really quite frightening.
So they meet at a party and she kind of snubs him and he finds that irresistible. That's just like
catnip to him. And she's already quite an unstable person when you look into her background.
Her family have had lots of concerns about her behavior before and about her
volcanic temper. And so they launch into this ridiculously passionate affair. And it only lasts
about five months. So just everyone bear that in mind, five months. You know, I've got things in
my fridge that are going to last for longer than that. Oh, but Kate, we were young ones.
Don't you remember those five months? They were some of the best.
My fascination with Byron, though, is that I know I would have been like this. I know if I'd met him,
I'd have been one of these silly girls following him across Europe going, but I can change him.
But Lady Caroline Lamb absolutely loses it.
Like she is in restraining order territory because one of the things that Byron does, I've said,
I'm not sure that he likes women that much.
He likes the thrill of the chase and he likes validation from them.
So he goes after quite unobtainable women.
And once he gets them and he gets that initial, like, yeah, that was amazing,
that he very quickly gets quite bored of them.
And that's what happens with Lady Caroline Lamb.
She is super aristocratic.
She is the niece of Georgiana Duchess of Devonshire.
She's married to this up-and-coming politician.
and she throws herself at Byron.
And she's doing things like she dresses up as a page boy to sneak in his house.
No way.
So that's quite odd.
She wakes him up in the middle of the night one time saying that they have to elope together.
And it's like, Caroline, but you are married.
And she breaks the cardinal rule of sexual debauchery and the aristocracy,
which is that she's not discreet about this.
She isn't discreet.
And people are starting to get worried about it.
Her family have this intervention and take her over to Ireland to chill out,
which she doesn't. Byron's still writing to her the whole time, by the way. And then when she finally
gets this letter from him basically saying, look, it's done. You need to chill out. She goes completely
mad. She has a bonfire. She hires local girls from the village to sing songs about how awful
Byron is while she's burning all of his poems and his books. She writes a novel, Glenn Arvin, about how
horrible he is. She stalks him. She keeps turning up in his building. She mimics his handwriting
to write to his publishers to get a portrait of him sent to her.
It's like, wow, Caroline.
Just wow.
It's such an unholy mess.
It really is.
Well, that's the Ponsonby family for you.
I mean, honestly, the only thing you can do with those people
is wind them up and fire them in the direction of the French, to be honest.
So poor her.
A different era, she'd have been there with her brother on the cavalry charges.
But it's an extraordinary quirk of fate.
He managed to convince someone to marry him.
I mean, how does that work?
Do you know what?
I knew I was going to come talk to you about this.
So I thought I would try and make a list of everyone that we know Byron has had sexual contact with.
And I've got it in front of me.
Listeners, she is brandishing a great sheath of paper.
He's 28 years old in my list and we're at hundreds of people already.
Wow.
There's hundreds of people.
So he is a man of gargantuan appetites and he doesn't treat people very well.
But he does manage to convince her name's Annabelle Milbank and she's the cousin of Lady Caroline Lamb.
So we're keeping it in the family.
He's also knocking off Caroline Lamb's mother-in-law, by the way. We'll just throw that one out there.
And having sex with one of her friends, Lady Oxford, as well. And he makes overture to Lady Oxford's 12-year-old daughter as well.
Oh, my God. So this is a mess. Somehow, it manages to convince a young girl, Annabella Milbank, who is not his type. She's very sensible. She's very pious. She likes mathematics and puzzles. And he manages to convince her to marry him.
to take the heat off this ridiculous situation with Caroline Lamb
that everybody is talking about,
also to get hold of her money,
and also because he is having sex with his half-sister Augusta as well.
Wait, my goodness me, that's a true thing, is it?
That is a true thing.
I know that there are like some Byron scholars out there
that like to sort of distance themselves,
oh, we don't really know.
Yeah, we do.
We do know, we do know that.
We've got love letters that they write to one another.
There's a letter that he writes a later in life
saying that I don't regret what happened between us,
the only sin was your terrible marriage.
At one point, Augusta, he calls August, gets pregnant and gives birth to a baby called
Medora, and he writes a letter saying, well, thank God, it's not a monkey, because there was
a superstition that incest would result in people giving birth to monkeys.
He's talking to his friends at the time about how he's in a real mess, worse than any
scrape he's been in before.
He confesses to Lady Melbourne, who is Lady Caroline Lamb's mother-in-law, that he is doing
this.
He is.
There's no smoking gun.
There's no DNA test.
but yeah, he is. So he needs to get married pretty quickly to get money and to calm down the
rumours that are spreading about him. Okay, wow. All right. And this poor girl says yes.
We shouldn't say yes immediately. She says no, first of all. And it's not particularly long courtship,
but it's all written by letters. And it's like watching a car crash in slow motion. It's just,
you know what's going to happen here. And it's exactly what does happen. So she marries him. She
falls in love with them. Everyone falls in love with him. And now he hates being married.
married. And because despite him being one of the greatest romantic poets, he seems to have the
emotional bandwidth of a hemorrhoid, he can't process the fact that he's now married and
now he hates his wife because he's married. So he's unbelievably cruel to her. He pulls this stunt
where he takes his wife to go and stay with his half-sister, Augusta, and they stay with her for a few
months. And the entire time he's flaunting the affair. He's doing things like sending his wife to
bed early and then staying up all night laughing and carusing with his sister.
When eventually this wife is going to file for a separation, she has lots and lots of evidence
about what he's been doing.
And it's quite clear that he's been having sex with his sister.
She can hear them and they've been flaunting the affair.
I mean, imagine marrying into this and then slowly realizing that your partner is most definitely
having a relationship with his half sister.
Wow.
He does horrible things like he gets her pregnant and then he sleeps in the room underneath
hers and throws things up at the ceiling all night long because he doesn't want her to get any
sleep. He is just unbelievably cruel and mean to this young woman and I can't excuse his behaviour
at all. Interestingly, she is pregnant with a very important person, isn't she? She is. Ada Lovelace.
Take a sidetrack there. So Ada Lovelace is the product of that short marriage. Yes, she is
the famous mathematician and intellectual giant. So there's no doubt that there is genius.
running through this family.
Yeah, it just took a woman to come and manifest it in a kind of sensible way.
And Ada Lovelace famously comes up with the idea, the kind of concept of a computational
device, so a computer.
So she's super smart.
Super smart.
Okay, but her father is now getting divorced, now properly scandal.
I mean, everyone knew about everything anyway, but why is this now a real scandal that's
a problem for him?
There's something weird that happens in social circles, though, isn't there?
There's like open secrets, and then there's when the secret becomes,
properly open and everyone turns the back on him. For the longest time, everyone was very excited
about Byron's naughtiness and his illicit reputation as a womanizer and this debauched poet was
very exciting. But then when people start to realize that, no, that is actually true, they turn
the back on him because Annabella Milbank goes back to her parents and it's just like, we have to
get me out of this. We have to get separated. So they put together this huge portfolio of information
as to why she should be separated from Byron.
Lady Caroline Lamb turns up as well to throw her two pence in,
because when they'd been having this affair,
Byron confessed to her that when he'd been in Greece and Turkey,
he'd been having sex with lots of men and boys
and that he'd been having sex with men and boys
since he was at Harrow and at university,
so she's got all of this information.
There's claims that he tried to sodomize his wife as well.
All of this is not good.
They will stand for adultery.
That's pretty standard, but accusations of sodomy
and same-sex relationships will absolutely not do at this time.
So he's got to get out of town and fast.
Listen to Dan Snow's history.
We're talking about Byron more coming up.
Okay, so this is now 1816, which actually is useful for him
because Europe after decades of war,
even though he's been on great big trips around Europe and elsewhere,
despite the greatest war that Britain's ever fought going on.
It's now, Europe, roughly speaking, now at peace,
so he can travel very widely, presumably.
So where does he head off to?
He heads off to the Mediterranean initially.
He's good friends with Percy Bish, Shelley, we should also say, another rogue,
who's also traips around Europe with a small gaggle of teenage girls with him,
claiming free love for all.
So I think there's a stopover in Geneva where the famous Frankenstein incident happens
that they all stay up one night writing scary stories,
and Mary Shelley quite spectacularly comes up with Frankenstein.
But we should say, well, during all of this men,
he has managed to find time to have another illicit affair with Mary Shelley's half-sister
called Claire Claremont, who also becomes infatuated with him, enamoured with him and pregnant.
And she elopes with the Shelly's, and then Byron goes to stay with them where this affair
continues. And she gives birth to a baby girl called Allegra, who, Byron again, I'm afraid, is a
complete shit. He eventually abandons Claire, saying, well, what could I possibly have done? She
wanted to have sex with me as well, well, fair enough than mate.
he goes again and this daughter, it basically assumes custody of her, won't let Claire see the baby,
and then sends the baby away to a convent and she dies on her own when she's four. So that's not nice,
is it? Oh, God. Okay. It's just grim. Yes, grim. All right. So then he continues traveling.
He just keeps going, does he. He continues traveling. He has some time in Europe. The scandal's following him.
When he's staying with the Shelly's, there would be like crowds of people gathering to try and get a peek of what was going on,
this house. So that's not working for him. So he goes to Italy and there he writes another bestseller,
a poem called Don Dewan. And it is Don Dewan, by the way. It's not Don Juan because he writes it,
Jewan. He writes to rhyme with new one and true one in the poem itself. He writes that. But quite
frankly, how he's found the time to do that is impressive because he's in another just debauched,
excessive wives, women. He's writing home that, you know, another few hundred women.
have been harassing him, but he does at this point get into a relationship with a woman that I think
he did love, Teresa Guccione, who's 19 years old, and of course she's married to somebody else.
And as much as Byron's ever going to do, he kind of settles down with her. She eventually has
her marriage dissolved. And by that point, he's bored of her and he moves on. But he's in
Italy, in Venice, writing poems, being notorious and having a lot of sex.
Well, he's gone to the right city. He has. Because Venice does have
reputation for that. Okay. And he likes that very much. He likes the freedom that comes in Italy and in
Greece and he gets very angry and upset with the hypocrisy of the British as he saw it. So he's doing that.
He spends quite a long time there actually a few years. And does he write? Is he writing? Is he
Yeah, he's writing. He's writing all the time. This big poem, Don Jewan, which was considered
very scandalous. It was unfinished at the time of his death. He was publishing cantos of it as he's
going along. It tells the story of this sort of legendary Spanish lover, Don Juan, and he's
kind of reappropriating that particular narrative. Again, very, very scandalous. He had big arguments
with his publishers about whether or not he should be allowed to publish it as is.
And is Don Juan, the reason we've heard of Don Juan, is that because of Byron? Was he a trope before
like a famous sort of myth or story before that, or is it really because of Byron?
I mean, Byron definitely ran with it, but Don Juan was a legendary figure before that.
Byron's Don Juan definitely added some more spice to the mix.
He kind of, in the same way that he identified with this child Harold character,
I mean, Byron is the ultimate Don Juan, isn't he?
Well, sure, yeah.
But he's a restless soul as well.
Does he start to head towards Greece after that time in Venice?
When does he become obsessed with Greek independence?
He's been obsessed with Greek independence for a while.
When he was a young man in early 20s, he spent a lot of time in Greece,
pester in the locals more than anything else. But he had a real sense of Greek identity,
of Greek independence. He was really angry when Lord Elgin took the marbles from the Parthenon.
He wrote quite extensively about that. He thought that that was absolutely hideous and diabolical
that these treasures would be removed from Greece just to teach English people how to do
architecture. He was really angry about that. So he's already got quite a fiercely protective
attitude to Greece and to Greek culture. It's something he identifies with.
a lot. And there's a war for Greek independence. And it's almost inevitable that he's going to get
caught up in this. Because you get a sense of Baron as he's getting older, because he's in his mid-30s
at this point, of he's bored and he's restless and he wants something more than being a poet.
There's a sense that he wants to achieve something with his life. He's never satisfied with what
he's got. And he gets this idea that he wants to be a war hero, which is
Again, it's an odd thing for him because in his poems, he's like he's very anti-war,
but at the same time, he loved Napoleon. He identified with Napoleon very, very strongly.
He collected Napoleon memorabilia, despite that being regarded as very unpatriotic at the time.
So he goes off to Greece, and by this time he is a very wealthy man, because for the first few years,
he didn't take any money for his poems because he's a gentleman, and he just don't pay me to write poems.
I'm a gentleman. But eventually he starts taking money from them, and then he's got a lot of money.
So he goes over to Greece and invests himself on this fight for Greek independence and pours money into this.
So he gets this kind of little commission in the army.
But again, it's not what he thinks it's going to be.
He thinks it's going to be the romantic hero charging in and saving the day.
But what he's got is a sort of a rag-tag band of mercenaries that endlessly need training.
And the weather in Greece is appalling and it's just raining and muddy.
And he doesn't see any war.
He's just involved in training exercises.
and he finds it all quite tedious.
It's not what he thought it would be.
So he never sees any action.
No.
But he does experience that other great reality of war in that era, which is disease.
Disease, yeah.
Almost inevitable, I think, because the conditioners were so bad
where he was living and trying to train these soldiers, were they?
That kind of mercenaries.
Yeah, these Greek recruits.
Eventually he goes out and he probably gets malaria.
That's probably what he gets.
But what actually kills him is the doctors trying to.
to bleed him, which they do endlessly. They do it every day. They take so much blood from him.
Screams a herd coming from his tent of him saying, close the veins, close the veins, and they
bleed him so much that eventually he dies. So he doesn't even get this big hero's death that he was
really hoping for. He's bled to death after contracting malaria but never actually sees
battle. But he'd be happy to know that that has been romanticised. I mean, we all know that he
falls, roughly speaking, fighting for Greek independence, even if he didn't do any fighting.
The branding exercise did work in the long term.
Oh, it did.
It absolutely did.
And when he died, because he was such a big name in Britain, notorious or not, the fact that
he died fighting for Greek independence really raised the profile of the Greek cause and more
people joined in.
And he is remembered as a hero.
You know, all right, he didn't see any battle.
But he did go out there to try and fight for Greek independence.
So it wasn't in vain.
I think that he would have been very proud of the fact that his death raised the profile of this particular struggle.
And as always when people actually die, then we romanticise them, don't we?
So he then becomes a hero in death.
And he was quite widely mourned as well.
It was a big shock when he died because he was only 36.
And although he was considered a very scandalous person, when his body was brought back, you know, the streets were lined with people.
everyday people, not just aristocrats, people that really saw him as a champion of the working man.
And in some ways he was, like his first speech in Parliament as a young man was to speak in favour of the machine breakers in the north of England who had been breaking machines that were going to put them out of work.
And the English government was trying to make that a capital offence and he goes in and he sticks up for them.
He did have an affinity for the underdog throughout most of his life.
So there is a huge outpouring of grief when he dies.
huge. He's such a curious
legend in British
literature and poetry because his poetry
isn't read anymore or it's not studied in school or anything
and yet he's just supremely famous still.
I know he's more famous for his life
and his lifestyle than his poems now I think
but I don't think that's necessarily a bad thing.
I've spoken to lots of Byron scholars
that get really pissed off with the mad, bad and dangerous
to know reputation because they feel it detracts
from his work from what he wrote and what he said
and I can completely see why they think that
But also I would argue that he was very aware of his reputation at the time. And he cultivated this celebrity image. And I don't think that you can have one without the other. This image that he had of the tragic romantic Lothario was absolutely central to his work as well. And he knew that and he cultivated it.
I mean, that's like Keith Richards and Mick Jagger in a hundred years time. You'd be like, oh, please stop talking about their biography. Let's just enjoy their music for itself.
Yes, exactly, exactly. Just the music. We just want to know about the music. It's that can you separate the art from the artist discussion? And I don't think Byron wanted you to. In fact, there's a sense when you're reading any of the many letters about him that he was playing up to it in many ways, that he was trying to be as sensational as possible because that was a reputation. Fame was very, very important to him. But no, we don't read his poems anymore. But we should. There's some crackers. He wrote, when Shelley died, he drowned.
young, Barron was there and they had to burn his body on the beach because of hygiene reasons.
I know it's all very, very grim, isn't it?
But he writes this amazing poem about his mate, Shelley, called We Go Nomura Roving.
And there's just like he's lost his mate and he's lost his kindred spirit.
And that's a really beautiful one.
And then there's the famous she walked in beauty clad like the night.
And he writes that about, I think that's about Teresa, one of his last great loves.
But we don't tend to read really long epic poems like Don Jewan and Child Harold any.
more. Well, you've inspired me to go and do that. Thank you very much, Kate Lister, your absolute
legend. Great to have you on the pod. Always love hanging out with you. So thank you for doing this.
And if people want to hear more of Kate Lister, you, they can do so on your podcast, which is called
Betwixt the Sheets, the History of Sex, Scandal and Society. Yeah, you've got to get that
downloaded and it will drop into your feed every week. You'd be mad not to. Thanks for coming on, Kate.
Pleasure. Thanks for having me.
Well, thanks so much, Kate Lister, and thank you all very much for listening.
It's always just great getting our history hosts together from these podcasts.
And let me know if you want me and Kate to cover something else.
We've done a similar episode on Kassanova, which is just as fine as this.
And you can find a link to that in the show notes.
And please go and check out Kate's podcast.
Until next time, though, see ya.
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