The credibility of the accusation
of the unnatural crime charged to Lord Byron is greater
than if charged to most men. He was born of parents
both of whom were remarkable for perfectly ungoverned
passions. There appears to be historical evidence
that he was speaking literal truth when he says to
Medwin of his father,
’He would have made a bad hero
for Hannah More. He ran out three fortunes,
and married or ran away with three women . . .
He seemed born for his own ruin and that of the
other sex. He began by seducing Lady Carmarthen,
and spent her four thousand pounds; and, not content
with one adventure of this kind, afterwards eloped
with Miss Gordon.’ Medwin’s
Conversations, .
Lady Carmarthen here spoken of was
the mother of Mrs. Leigh. Miss Gordon became
Lord Byron’s mother.
By his own account, and that of Moore,
she was a passionate, ungoverned, though affectionate
woman. Lord Byron says to Medwin,
’I lost my father when I was only
six years of age. My mother, when she was
in a passion with me (and I gave her cause enough),
used to say, “O you little dog! you are a
Byron all over; you are as bad as your father!"’ Ibid.,
.
By all the accounts of his childhood
and early youth, it is made apparent that ancestral
causes had sent him into the world with a most perilous
and exceptional sensitiveness of brain and nervous
system, which it would have required the most judicious
course of education to direct safely and happily.
Lord Byron often speaks as if he deemed
himself subject to tendencies which might terminate
in insanity. The idea is so often mentioned and
dwelt upon in his letters, journals, and conversations,
that we cannot but ascribe it to some very peculiar
experience, and not to mere affectation.
But, in the history of his early childhood
and youth, we see no evidence of any original malformation
of nature. We see only evidence of one of those
organisations, full of hope and full of peril, which
adverse influences might easily drive to insanity,
but wise physiological training and judicious moral
culture might have guided to the most splendid results.
But of these he had neither. He was alternately
the pet and victim of his mother’s tumultuous
nature, and equally injured both by her love and her
anger. A Scotch maid of religious character
gave him early serious impressions of religion, and
thus added the element of an awakened conscience to
the conflicting ones of his character.
Education, in the proper sense of
the word, did not exist in England in those days.
Physiological considerations of the influence of the
body on the soul, of the power of brain and nerve
over moral development, had then not even entered
the general thought of society. The school and
college education literally taught him nothing but
the ancient classics, of whose power in exciting and
developing the animal passions Byron often speaks.
The morality of the times is strikingly
exemplified even in its literary criticism.
For example: One of Byron’s
poems, written while a schoolboy at Harrow, is addressed
to ‘My Son.’ Mr. Moore, and the annotator
of the standard edition of Byron’s poems, gravely
give the public their speculations on the point, whether
Lord Byron first became a father while a schoolboy
at Harrow; and go into particulars in relation to
a certain infant, the claim to which lay between Lord
Byron and another schoolfellow. It is not the
nature of the event itself, so much as the cool, unembarrassed
manner in which it is discussed, that gives the impression
of the state of public morals. There is no intimation
of anything unusual, or discreditable to the school,
in the event, and no apparent suspicion that it will
be regarded as a serious imputation on Lord Byron’s
character.
Modern physiological developments
would lead any person versed in the study of the reciprocal
influence of physical and moral laws to anticipate
the most serious danger to such an organisation as
Lord Byron’s, from a precocious development
of the passions. Alcoholic and narcotic stimulants,
in the case of such a person, would be regarded as
little less than suicidal, and an early course of combined
drinking and licentiousness as tending directly to
establish those unsound conditions which lead towards
moral insanity. Yet not only Lord Byron’s
testimony, but every probability from the licence
of society, goes to show that this was exactly what
did take place.
Neither restrained by education, nor
warned by any correct physiological knowledge, nor
held in check by any public sentiment, he drifted directly
upon the fatal rock.
Here we give Mr. Moore full credit
for all his abatements in regard to Lord Byron’s
excesses in his early days. Moore makes the point
very strongly that he was not, de facto, even so bad
as many of his associates; and we agree with him.
Byron’s physical organisation was originally
as fine and sensitive as that of the most delicate
woman. He possessed the faculty of moral ideality
in a high degree; and he had not, in the earlier part
of his life, an attraction towards mere brutal vice.
His physical sensitiveness was so remarkable that he
says of himself, ’A dose of salts has the effect
of a temporary inebriation, like light champagne,
upon me.’ Yet this exceptionally delicately-organised
boy and youth was in a circle where not to conform
to the coarse drinking-customs of his day was to incur
censure and ridicule. That he early acquired
the power of bearing large quantities of liquor is
manifested by the record in his Journal, that, on
the day when he read the severe ‘Edinburgh’
article upon his schoolboy poems, he drank three bottles
of claret at a sitting.
Yet Byron was so far superior to his
times, that some vague impulses to physiological prudence
seem to have suggested themselves to him, and been
acted upon with great vigour. He never could
have lived so long as he did, under the exhaustive
process of every kind of excess, if he had not re-enforced
his physical nature by an assiduous care of his muscular
system. He took boxing-lessons, and distinguished
himself in all athletic exercises.
He also had periods in which he seemed
to try vaguely to retrieve himself from dissipation,
and to acquire self-mastery by what he called temperance.
But, ignorant and excessive in all
his movements, his very efforts at temperance were
intemperate. From violent excesses in eating
and drinking, he would pass to no less unnatural periods
of utter abstinence. Thus the very conservative
power which Nature has of adapting herself to any
settled course was lost. The extreme sensitiveness
produced by long periods of utter abstinence made
the succeeding debauch more maddening and fatal.
He was like a fine musical instrument, whose strings
were every day alternating between extreme tension
and perfect laxity. We have in his Journal many
passages, of which the following is a specimen:
’I have dined regularly to-day,
for the first time since Sunday last; this being
Sabbath too, all the rest, tea and dry biscuits,
six per diem. I wish to God I had not dined,
now! It kills me with heaviness, stupor,
and horrible dreams; and yet it was but a pint of
bucellas, and fish. Meat I never touch, nor
much vegetable diet. I wish I were in the
country, to take exercise, instead of being obliged
to cool by abstinence, in lieu of it. I should
not so much mind a little accession of flesh:
my bones can well bear it. But the worst is,
the Devil always came with it, till I starved him out;
and I will not be the slave of any appetite.
If I do err, it shall be my heart, at least, that
heralds the way. O my head! how it aches!
The horrors of digestion! I wonder how Bonaparte’s
dinner agrees with him.’ Moore’s
Life, vol. ii. .
From all the contemporary history
and literature of the times, therefore, we have reason
to believe that Lord Byron spoke the exact truth when
he said to Medwin,
’My own master at an age when I
most required a guide, left to the dominion of
my passions when they were the strongest, with a fortune
anticipated before I came into possession of it,
and a constitution impaired by early excesses,
I commenced my travels, in 1809, with a joyless
indifference to the world and all that was before
me.’ Medwin’s Conversations,
.
Utter prostration of the whole physical
man from intemperate excess, the deadness to temptation
which comes from utter exhaustion, was his condition,
according to himself and Moore, when he first left
England, at twenty-one years of age.
In considering his subsequent history,
we are to take into account that it was upon the brain
and nerve-power, thus exhausted by early excess, that
the draughts of sudden and rapid literary composition
began to be made. There was something unnatural
and unhealthy in the rapidity, clearness, and vigour
with which his various works followed each other.
Subsequently to the first two cantos of ‘Childe
Harold,’ ’The Bride of Abydos,’
‘The Corsair,’ ‘The Giaour,’
‘Lara,’ ‘Parisina,’ and ’The
Siege of Corinth,’ all followed close upon each
other, in a space of less than three years, and those
the three most critical years of his life. ’The
Bride of Abydos’ came out in the autumn of 1813,
and was written in a week; and ‘The Corsair’
was composed in thirteen days. A few months more
than a year before his marriage, and the brief space
of his married life, was the period in which all this
literary labour was performed, while yet he was running
the wild career of intrigue and fashionable folly.
He speaks of ‘Lara’ as being tossed off
in the intervals between masquerades and balls, etc.
It is with the physical results of such unnatural
efforts that we have now chiefly to do. Every
physiologist would say that the demands of such poems
on a healthy brain, in that given space, must have
been exhausting; but when we consider that they were
cheques drawn on a bank broken by early extravagance,
and that the subject was prodigally spending vital
forces in every other direction at the same time,
one can scarcely estimate the physiological madness
of such a course as Lord Byron’s.
It is evident from his Journal, and
Moore’s account, that any amount of physical
force which was for the time restored by his first
foreign travel was recklessly spent in this period,
when he threw himself with a mad recklessness into
London society in the time just preceding his marriage.
The revelations made in Moore’s Memoir of this
period are sad enough: those to Medwin are so
appalling as to the state of contemporary society
in England, as to require, at least, the benefit of
the doubt for which Lord Byron’s habitual carelessness
of truth gave scope. His adventures with ladies
of the highest rank in England are there paraded with
a freedom of detail that respect for womanhood must
lead every woman to question. The only thing
that is unquestionable is, that Lord Byron made these
assertions to Medwin, not as remorseful confessions,
but as relations of his bonnes fortunes, and that
Medwin published them in the very face of the society
to which they related.
When Lord Byron says, ’I have
seen a great deal of Italian society, and swum in
a gondola; but nothing could equal the profligacy of
high life in England . . . when I knew it,’
he makes certainly strong assertions, if we remember
what Mr. Moore reveals of the harem kept in Venice.
But when Lord Byron intimates that
three married women in his own rank in life, who had
once held illicit relations with him, made wedding-visits
to his wife at one time, we must hope that he drew
on his active imagination, as he often did, in his
statements in regard to women.
When he relates at large his amour
with Lord Melbourne’s wife, and represents her
as pursuing him with an insane passion, to which he
with difficulty responded; and when he says that she
tracked a rival lady to his lodgings, and came into
them herself, disguised as a carman one
hopes that he exaggerates. And what are we to
make of passages like this?
’There was a lady at that time,
double my own age, the mother of several children
who were perfect angels, with whom I formed a liaison
that continued without interruption for eight months.
She told me she was never in love till she was
thirty, and I thought myself so with her when she
was forty. I never felt a stronger passion, which
she returned with equal ardour . . . . . . .
’Strange as it may seem, she
gained, as all women do, an influence
over me so strong that I had great
difficulty in breaking with her.’
Unfortunately, these statements, though
probably exaggerated, are, for substance, borne out
in the history of the times. With every possible
abatement for exaggeration in these statements, there
remains still undoubted evidence from other sources
that Lord Byron exercised a most peculiar and fatal
power over the moral sense of the women with whom he
was brought in relation; and that love for him, in
many women, became a sort of insanity, depriving them
of the just use of their faculties. All this
makes his fatal history both possible and probable.
Even the article in ‘Blackwood,’
written in 1825 for the express purpose of vindicating
his character, admits that his name had been coupled
with those of three, four, or more women of rank,
whom it speaks of as ‘licentious, unprincipled,
characterless women.’
That such a course, in connection
with alternate extremes of excess and abstinence in
eating and drinking, and the immense draughts on the
brain-power of rapid and brilliant composition, should
have ended in that abnormal state in which cravings
for unnatural vice give indications of approaching
brain-disease, seems only too probable.
This symptom of exhausted vitality
becomes often a frequent type in periods of very corrupt
society. The dregs of the old Greek and Roman
civilisation were foul with it; and the apostle speaks
of the turning of the use of the natural into that
which is against nature, as the last step in abandonment.
The very literature of such periods
marks their want of physical and moral soundness.
Having lost all sense of what is simple and natural
and pure, the mind delights to dwell on horrible ideas,
which give a shuddering sense of guilt and crime.
All the writings of this fatal period of Lord Byron’s
life are more or less intense histories of unrepentant
guilt and remorse or of unnatural crime. A recent
writer in ‘Temple Bar’ brings to light
the fact, that ‘The Bride of Abydos,’ the
first of the brilliant and rapid series of poems which
began in the period immediately preceding his marriage,
was, in its first composition, an intense story of
love between a brother and sister in a Turkish harem;
that Lord Byron declared, in a letter to Galt, that
it was drawn from real life; that, in compliance with
the prejudices of the age, he altered the relationship
to that of cousins before publication.
This same writer goes on to show,
by a series of extracts from Lord Byron’s published
letters and journals, that his mind about this time
was in a fearfully unnatural state, and suffering
singular and inexplicable agonies of remorse; that,
though he was accustomed fearlessly to confide to
his friends immoralities which would be looked upon
as damning, there was now a secret to which he could
not help alluding in his letters, but which he told
Moore he could not tell now, but ’some day or
other when we are veterans.’ He speaks
of his heart as eating itself out; of a mysterious
person, whom he says, ’God knows I love too well,
and the Devil probably too.’ He wrote
a song, and sent it to Moore, addressed to a partner
in some awful guilt, whose very name he dares not mention,
because
‘There is
grief in the sound, there is guilt in the fame.’
He speaks of struggles of remorse,
of efforts at repentance, and returns to guilt, with
a sort of horror very different from the well-pleased
air with which he relates to Medwin his common intrigues
and adulteries. He speaks of himself generally
as oppressed by a frightful, unnatural gloom and horror,
and, when occasionally happy, ’not in a way that
can or ought to last.’
‘The Giaour,’ ‘The
Corsair,’ ‘Lara,’ ‘Parisina,’
‘The Siege of Corinth,’ and ‘Manfred,’
all written or conceived about this period of his life,
give one picture of a desperate, despairing, unrepentant
soul, whom suffering maddens, but cannot reclaim.
In all these he paints only the one
woman, of concentrated, unconsidering passion, ready
to sacrifice heaven and defy hell for a guilty man,
beloved in spite of religion or reason. In this
unnatural literature, the stimulus of crime is represented
as intensifying love. Medora, Gulnare, the Page
in ‘Lara,’ Parisina, and the lost sister
of Manfred, love the more intensely because the object
of the love is a criminal, out-lawed by God and man.
The next step beyond this is madness.
The work of Dr. Forbes Winslow on
’Obscure Diseases of the Brain and Nerves’
contains a passage so very descriptive of the
case of Lord Byron, that it might seem to have been
written for it. The sixth chapter of his work,
on ‘Anomalous and Masked Affections of the Mind,’
contains, in our view, the only clue that can unravel
the sad tragedy of Byron’s life. He says,
,
’These forms of unrecognised mental
disorder are not always accompanied by any well-marked
disturbance of the bodily health requiring medical
attention, or any obvious departure from a normal
state of thought and conduct such as to justify
legal interference; neither do these affections
always incapacitate the party from engaging in
the ordinary business of life . . . . The change
may have progressed insidiously and stealthily,
having slowly and almost imperceptibly induced
important molecular modifications in the delicate
vesicular neurine of the brain, ultimately resulting
in some aberration of the ideas, alteration of
the affections, or perversion of the propensities
or instincts. . . .
’Mental disorder of a dangerous
character has been known for years to be stealthily
advancing, without exciting the slightest notion of
its presence, until some sad and terrible catastrophe,
homicide, or suicide, has painfully awakened attention
to its existence. Persons suffering from
latent insanity often affect singularity of dress,
gait, conversation, and phraseology. The most
trifling circumstances stimulate their excitability.
They are martyrs to ungovernable paroxysms of
passion, are inflamed to a state of demoniacal fury
by the most insignificant of causes, and occasionally
lose all sense of delicacy of feeling, sentiment,
refinement of manners and conversation. Such
manifestations of undetected mental disorder may be
seen associated with intellectual and moral qualities
of the highest order.’
In another place, Dr. Winslow again
adverts to this latter symptom, which was strikingly
marked in the case of Lord Byron:
’All delicacy and decency
of thought are occasionally banished from
the mind, so effectually does the
principle of thought in these
attacks succumb to the animal instincts
and passions . . . .
’Such cases will commonly be found
associated with organic predisposition to insanity
or cerebral disease . . . . Modifications of
the malady are seen allied with genius. The biographies
of Cowper, Burns, Byron, Johnson, Pope, and Haydon
establish that the most exalted intellectual conditions
do not escape unscathed.
’In early childhood, this
form of mental disturbance may, in many
cases, be detected. To its
existence is often to be traced the
motiveless crimes of the young.’
No one can compare this passage of
Dr. Forbes Winslow with the incidents we have already
cited as occurring in that fatal period before the
separation of Lord and Lady Byron, and not feel that
the hapless young wife was indeed struggling with
those inflexible natural laws, which, at some stages
of retribution, involve in their awful sweep the guilty
with the innocent. She longed to save; but he
was gone past redemption. Alcoholic stimulants
and licentious excesses, without doubt, had produced
those unseen changes in the brain, of which Dr. Forbes
Winslow speaks; and the results were terrible in proportion
to the peculiar fineness and delicacy of the organism
deranged.
Alas! the history of Lady Byron is
the history of too many women in every rank of life
who are called, in agonies of perplexity and fear,
to watch that gradual process by which physical excesses
change the organism of the brain, till slow, creeping,
moral insanity comes on. The woman who is the
helpless victim of cruelties which only unnatural states
of the brain could invent, who is heart-sick to-day
and dreads to-morrow, looks in hopeless
horror on the fatal process by which a lover and a
protector changes under her eyes, from day to day,
to a brute and a fiend.
Lady Byron’s married life alas!
it is lived over in many a cottage and tenement-house,
with no understanding on either side of the cause of
the woeful misery.
Dr. Winslow truly says, ’The
science of these brain-affections is yet in its infancy
in England.’ At that time, it had not even
begun to be. Madness was a fixed point; and the
inquiries into it had no nicety. Its treatment,
if established, had no redeeming power. Insanity
simply locked a man up as a dangerous being; and the
very suggestion of it, therefore, was resented as
an injury.
A most peculiar and affecting feature
of that form of brain disease which hurries its victim,
as by an overpowering mania, into crime, is, that
often the moral faculties and the affections remain
to a degree unimpaired, and protest with all their
strength against the outrage. Hence come conflicts
and agonies of remorse proportioned to the strength
of the moral nature. Byron, more than any other
one writer, may be called the poet of remorse.
His passionate pictures of this feeling seem to give
new power to the English language:
’There is a war, a chaos of
the mind,
When all its elements convulsed combined,
Lie dark and jarring with perturbed
force,
And gnashing with impenitent remorse,
That juggling fiend, who never spake
before,
But cries, “I warned thee!”
when the deed is o’er.’
It was this remorse that formed the
only redeeming feature of the case. Its eloquence,
its agonies, won from all hearts the interest that
we give to a powerful nature in a state of danger
and ruin; and it may be hoped that this feeling, which
tempers the stern justice of human judgments, may
prove only a faint image of the wider charity of Him
whose thoughts are as far above ours as the heaven
is above the earth.