Lord Byron's Poems

Lord Byron's Poems Glossary

Albania

area on the eastern shore of the Adriatic Sea, across the sea from Italy and next to Greece; in Byron’s time it was not a distinct nation, but was the general name for the area in which various peoples lived

boatswain

a low-level officer on a merchant ship who maintained the hull

Byronic hero

archetypal protagonist created and popularized by Lord Byron; the Byronic hero is characterized by a secret sin or tragedy in his past, an attitude of unrepentant rebellion against authority in its various forms, a love of freedom in all areas of life, and a brooding demeanor

canto

a section of a long poem, or a "song" which, together with other cantos, makes up the whole poem

caparison'd

covered with a caparison (a decorated cloth), like a horse might be; adorned

capote

long cloak with a hood, often part of an official uniform

certes

a certain or inevitable outcome

childe

a young noble

circumambient

surrounding; encompassing

circumscribe

to draw a circle or curve around, literally or figuratively

courtesan

a prostitute, especially a higher-end one

efface

to completely erase or wipe away

guerdon

a reward

iambic pentameter

the pattern of syllables in a line of poetry consisting of five units, each unit having an unstressed or short syllable followed by a stressed or long syllable (in iambic hexameter, there are six units for a total of twelve syllables following the same pattern)

Leucadia

a Greek island in the Ionian Sea (the Adriatic side of Greece), named from a word meaning "clear" or "white"; it is a location connected to myths including Sappho's suicide

minaret

a tall, thin tower overlooking a mosque, which is used for the call to prayer

ottava rima

poetry written in groups of eight rhymed lines in iambic pentameter, following the rhyme scheme abababcc

palsied

weakened or unable to move, physically or mentally

pelisse

a coat lined with fur, often part of a military uniform

perchance

perhaps

perpetuity

eternity; forever

phalanx

especially in ancient Greece, a closely packed group of soldiers who are protected by their overlapping shields as they project spears out of their formation

phrenzied

in a frenzy or panic

pilgrimage

a long journey, particularly one with religious or spiritual significance and a specific, meaningful goal

Pythian

relating to Delphi, the temple of Apollo where an oracle revealed secrets and wisdom

Sappho

a famous Ancient Greek poet born on the island of Lesbos in the 7th century B.C., most of whose poetry has been lost except in fragments, though it was greatly admired throughout antiquity, and her strong reputation has endured; in various stories about her death, she commits suicide by leaping into the sea

sedge

a grassy plant

sophist

a Greek professional philosopher who taught skills such as rhetoric, argument, and debate, but who tended to value victory over nailing down the truth; the sophists were active around the time of the alternative philosophers Socrates and Plato, who were their main critics and set a new path for philosophy

Spenserian stanza

a stanza (a group of lines in a poem) devised by the poet Edmund Spenser that contains eight lines of iambic pentameter plus a ninth line of iambic hexameter, using the rhyme scheme ababbcbcc

waft

to coast or drift through the air

zephyr

a gentle breeze; the "West Wind"

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