Don Juan: Lord Byron
Don Juan: Lord Byron
Don Juan: Lord Byron
Don Juan
Jeffrey Maloney, Ryan Nylander, Jinny Chae
Period 1
Lord Byron (1788-1824)
Donna Inez: Don Juan mother and sole guardian, a woman with a
“great opinion of her own good qualities.” (Stanza 20) She educated
him greatly in the field of the arts and sciences, but refused to teach
Juan anything about about sex or women in his upbringing.
Donna Julia: The woman to first fall in love with the 16-year old. She is
his first sexual experience, and is unhappily married to 50-year old
Don Alfonso.
Essential Characters, cont.
Haidee: A native from the Aegean island. She is Juan’s first true love.
When her father and his pirate run Juan away, she dies from
heartbreak.
Gulbayez (Sultana): Secretly buys Juan and John from the slave
market. She lusts after Juan, despite being the wife of a powerful
Sultan. After a misunderstanding involving Juan and another
woman she orders that Juan and John be executed.
Essential Characters, cont.
Leila: Juan’s adopted daughter. He saved her during the sack of Ismail.
Empress Catherine II: The Christian ruler of Russia, who is very fond of Don
Juan; shares her bed with him and showers him with expensive gifts.
Lady Adeline: A married woman of the English aristocracy who resists her lust
for Don Juan.
The Duchess of Fitz-Fulke: A voluptuous upper-class lady who flirts with Don
Juan.
The Ghost of the Black Friar: A mysterious phantom that Don Juan sees one
night.
Don Juan in European legend
• A popular folk legend, the story of Don Juan had already been told
many times prior to Lord Byron's epic poem.
• The crew quickly runs out of food, eat Juan's dog, then
draw straws to decide who will be eaten next
•
immediately lusts after him.
He quickly falls ill of the Russian cold, and she
invents some vague political task for him to
perform in England as an excuse to send him
•
somewhere warm.
Meanwhile, Don Juan continues to care for the
orphan girl. Being Muslim, she refuses to be
•
converted to Christianity.
Notable quotes:
o What a strange thing is man! and what a
stranger
Is woman! (Stanza 64)
Cantos XI and XII: London
• Don Juan is brought to the English court, where he meets once again with
•
the admiration of women and jealousy of men.
He then sets out to find a suitable caretaker for Leila. He finds one in Lady
•
Pinchbeck, a person he deems worthy despite rumors about her chastity.
Notable quotes:
o 'Tis strange that the mind, that very fiery particle,
Should let itself be snuff'd out by an article. (Stanza 60; of John
Keats)
Cantos XIII and XIV: An Upper-Class Feast
• Notable quotes:
o Of all the horrid, hideous notes of woe,/Sadder than owl-songs
or the midnight blast,/Is that portentous phrase, I told you so.
(Stanza 50)
o 'Tis strange -- but true; for truth is always strange;/Stranger
than fiction (Stanza 101)
Canto XV: Prospective Lovers
• The lady suggests marriage to Don Juan, who contests that most of
the women he finds attractive tend to be married already. She
proposes a list of suitable lovers, but Don Juan is attracted to the
Catholic Aurora Raby, who reminds him of his lost Haidée.
Canto XVI: The Black Friar's Ghost
•
•
Byron died before he could complete this section.
Here he responds to his critics, comparing himself to great men, such as
Galileo, whose ideas were unpopular in their own times. (Don Juan was
dismissed by many as immoral, but contrary to Byron's claims it was
widely popular.)
o Great Galileo was debarr'd the Sun
Because he fix'd it; and, to stop his talking,
How Earth could round the solar orbit run,
Found his own legs embargo'd from mere walking:
The man was well-nigh dead, ere men begun
To think his skull had not some need of caulking;
But now, it seems, he's right — his notion just:
No doubt a consolation to his dust. (Stanza 8)
Sent to Russian
Catches court, sleeps with
Lives with the cold, sent Catherine II
Amundevilles to London
Sold into
slavery
Battle of
Banishment, Ismail
Shipwreck
Greek
island
The Byronic Hero
• Typically, the hero has a dark secret, the guilt of which drives him
to his inevitable doom.
The Byronic Hero, Cont.
• In his epic poem, Lord Byron deviates considerably from both his
signature heroic archetype and the familiar Don Juan legend.
• Don Juan does endure heroic suffering of a kind, but "he is guiltless
and always remains unaltered by the experience, no matter how
violent." (Oxford, P. 315)
• Norton observes that "the poet who in his brilliant successful youth
created the gloomy Byronic hero, in his later and sadder life
created... one of the great comic inventions in English literature."
(P.1690)
Structure: Ottava Rima
•
•
The form of verse featured in Don Juan
•
Written in Iambic Pentameter; follows the rhyme pattern ab ab ab cc
The first six lines typically build into a comedic observation or
commentary in the final couplet.
o Amongst her numerous acquaintance, all
Selected for discretion and devotion,
There was the Donna Julia, whom to call
Pretty were but to give a feeble notion
Of many charms in her as natural
As sweetness to the flower, or salt to ocean,
Her zone to Venus, or his bow to Cupid
(But this last simile is trite and stupid). (Stanza 55)
Structure: The Hegelian Dialectic
• Lord Byron insisted that his poem did not follow any planned structure,
•
and that all plot developments were entirely improvised.
However, an underlying pattern can be detected throughout the epic.
Whether this was intentional or merely developed naturally due to Byron's
•
innate poetic sense of aesthetic balance is unclear.
The Hegelian Dialectic is an ancient method of solving a dispute, which is
divided into three parts:
o 1. a Thesis, in which an idea is presented, which contains the seeds of
o 2. an Antithesis, which contradicts the Thesis while simultaneously
containing its genesis as well, leading to
o 3. the Synthesis, which reaches the truth by uniting the two conflicting
•
ideas.
If we think of this poem as an attempt on Byron's part to resolve the
conflict raging within himself, Don Juan can be divided into these three
sections.
Hegelian Dialectic, Cont.
The Black
Friar's Ghost
Sold into Battle of
Banishment,
slavery Ismail
Shipwreck
I II III
Hegelian Dialectic, Cont.
• The relative emotional structures of the first two sections form a rough
symmetry with each other and eventually resolve in the more lukewarm
third segment.
• In Hegel’s philosophy the dialectic was the means by which all knowledge
was acquired. The ultimate goal of this system of reasoning was to achieve
understanding of the metaphysical Absolute; for the Christian philosopher,
to understand the nature of God.
• Byron’s search for meaning in his life is reflected by his use of dialectic
structure in his magnum opus, Don Juan, which he wrote over a long
period of time. His hero’s anticlimactic confrontation with the Black Friar’s
ghost just before he died represents his own failure to achieve
understanding. (Whissel)
Epic Qualities
• Vast Setting: After being sent away by his mother, Don Juan makes
a grand tour of Europe, from Spain to a primitive Greek island, to
the 1790 siege on the Turkish town of Ismail, to the Russian court,
and finally to the country manors of the the English gentry.
Epic Qualities, cont.
• Theme Statement:
o Pleasure's a sin, and sometimes sin's a pleasure. (1.133)
The theme is not stated in the first few stanzas, but thematic
statements are made occasionally throughout the epic.
Epic Qualities, cont.
• Don Juan does not embody his culture; on the contrary, in the
fashion of the Byronic hero, he is an outcast. Lord Byron uses
Juan’s status as an outsider to present a satire of every social class
that his hero encounters. Thus, the poem is as much a satire as it is
an epic.
Epic Qualities, cont.
• Divine intervention is not featured; neither does Don Juan journey to Hell.
Byron may have eventually included these events, had he finished more
cantos prior to his death:
Of course, he wrote more than 12 cantos, and none of them feature Hell.
Works Cited
Greenblatt, S., Greenblatt, F., & et al, F. (2006). The norton anthology of english literature. (8th ed. ed.).
New York: W. W. Norton
Kermode, F., & Hollander, J. (1973). The oxford anthology of english literature. (Vol. 2, pp. 285-286).
New York: Oxford University Press.
Peacocke, E. (2010). "a novel word in my vocabulary": Laughter and the evolution of the byronic model
into don juan. Informally published manuscript, University of California, Los Angeles, Los Angeles, CA.
Available from Anthropoetics: the Journal of Generative Anthropology. (Volume XV, number 2)
Retrieved from http://www.anthropoetics.ucla.edu/ap1502/1502Peacocke.htm
Whissel, C. (1999). 'tis more than what is called mobilit'y: Structure and a development towards
understanding in byron's don juan. Informally published manuscript, Laurentian University, Greater
Sudbury, Canada. Available from Romanticism on the Net. (DOI no. 10.7202/005837ar). Retrieved from
http://www.erudit.org/revue/ron/1999/v/n13/005837ar.html