from Part II - Political, Social and Intellectual Transformations
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 04 October 2019
In the biographical foreword to his ten-volume edition of Pope (1806), the Rev. William Lisle Bowles observed that the poet often “appears to have felt a sort of libertine love, which his passions continually prompted him to declare; but which the consciousness of his infirmities, and we ought to add his moral feelings, corrected and restrained.” Byron seized indignantly on the first phrase, asking:
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