The Characteristics of Byron
He was anxious to show you that he possessed no Shakespeare or Milton; "because," he said, "I have been accused of borrowing from them!" He affected to doubt whether Shakespeare was so great a genius as he has been taken for, and whether fashion had not a great deal to do with it. Spenser he could not read--at least he said so. All the gusto of that most poetical of the poets went with him for nothing. I lent him a volume of the Faerie Queene, and he said he would try to like it. Next day he brought it to my study window, and said: "Here, Hunt, here is your Spenser. I cannot see anything in him;" and he seemed anxious that I should take it out of his hands, as if he was afraid of being accused of copying so poor a writer. That he saw nothing in Spenser is not likely; but I really do not think that he saw much. Spenser was too much out of the world, and he too much in it....
Leigh Hunt
Lord Byron and some of his Contemporaries
Leigh Hunt, born in Southgate, England, 1784; died in 1859.
Leigh Hunt
Lord Byron and some of his Contemporaries
Leigh Hunt, born in Southgate, England, 1784; died in 1859.
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