Drew University Library http://www.drew.edu/library

Scrawled Shortcuts through the Research Maze

The Byron Society Library is coming to Drew---Who was this 19th c. superstar?

Oxford Encyclopedia of British Literature

A literary take on Byron’s “villainous heroes, satiric barbs, brooding and sometimes gloomy verse, seductive good looks, and the rakish behavior that for decades after his death made him anathema . . .”
Online, under Research Resources, English

Literature Resource Center

Search “Byron, George Gordon” or “Lord Byron” to acquaint yourself with Nineteenth Century Literary Criticism of Byron--- and Byron’s own criticism, like the deliciously snarky “Letter to the Editor of 'My Grandmother's Review.’”
Online, under Research Resources.

Encyclopedia of Romanticism: Culture in Britain, 1780s-1830s

Part of Byron’s romance was his romantic imbroglios. Read up on the scandals of Byron’s life and then check out his Byronic Hero-- “an energetic spirit, a rebellious individualism, and a vast capacity for feeling and suffering.”
REF 941.073 E56e

Britain in the Hanoverian Age, 1714-1837

Investigate Lady Caroline Lamb, who caricatured Byron in Glenarvon. The index (under “Byron”) yields further gems, such as “attacked Castlereagh; attacked Elgin; encouraged Coleridge to publish; satirized Lake Poets…”
REF 941.07 B862b

British Writers

For literary-biographical scandalmongering on Byron, see vol. IV, p. 171-194.
REF 820.9 B862b

Credo Reference

Who said, “There is no believing a word they say . . .there never existed a more worthless set than Byron and his friends” ? Search the “Quotations” to find out.
Online, under Research Resources.

Notable Mathematicians: From Ancient Times to the Present

Byron’s daughter, Augusta Ada, Lady Lovelace, became a mathematician and wrote the first computer program, for the Babbage Engine, though she went on to follow in her father’s footsteps of family scandal.
REF 510.922 N899n

Warning: Browsing Library resources can be Romantic!