THЕ MINISTRY ОF HIGHЕR АND SЕCОNDАRY SPЕCIАL ЕDUCАTIОN ОF THЕ RЕPUBLIC ОF UZBЕKISTАN
SАMАRKАND STАTЕ INSTITUTЕ ОF FОRЕIGN LАNGUАGЕS
FОRЕIGN LАNGUАGЕ АND LITЕRАTURЕ
ЕNGLISH FАCULTY II
CОURSЕ PАPЕR
“Biblical images in the poetry of Byron ”
Written by student of 2nd course: Gʻaniyev Umidjon
Sciеntific supеrvisеr: A.I.Toʻrayev
Samarkand - 2022
CОNTENT
INTRОDUCTIОN…………………………………………….……2-3
1. Lord Byron's way of life ..............................................................4-10
2. The contribution of Lord Byron to the world literature..........11-14
3. The term of biblical imagery in the literature...........................15-18
4. Biblical images of Byron's literary works..................................19-20
5. The explication of Lord Byron's "Darkness"............................21-24
CОNCLUSIОN………………………………………………….....25-26
THE LIST ОF USED LITERАTURE………………............…....27-28
Intrоductiоn
Lord Byron was a leading figure of the Romantic Movement. His specific ideas about life and nature benefitted the world of literature. Marked by Hudibrastic verse, blank verse, allusive imagery, heroic couplets, and complex structures, his diverse literary pieces won global acclaim. However, his early work, Fugitive Pieces, brought him to the center of criticism, but his later works made inroads into the literary world. He successfully used blank verse and satire in his pieces to explore the ideas of love and nature. Although he is known as a romantic poet, his poems, “The Prisoner of Chillon” and “Darkness” where attempts to discuss reality as it is without adding fictional elements. The recurring themes in most of his pieces are nature, the folly of love, realism in literature, liberty and the power of art. Lord Byron’s unique literary ideas brought new perspectives for English literature. His distinctive writing approach and experimentation with epics and lyrics made him stand out even among the best poets. His narrative and lyrical works are regarded as masterpieces and had had significant impacts on generations. He successfully documented his ideas and feelings about historical tragedies and romanticism in his writings that even today, writers try to imitate his unique style, considering him a beacon for writing plays and poetry.
The most flamboyant and notorious of the major English Romantic poets, George Gordon, Lord Byron, was likewise the most fashionable poet of the early 1800s. He created an immensely popular Romantic hero—defiant, melancholy, haunted by secret guilt—for which, to many, he seemed the model. He is also a Romantic paradox: a leader of the era’s poetic revolution, he named Alexander Pope as his master; a worshiper of the ideal, he never lost touch with reality; a deist and freethinker, he retained from his youth a Calvinist sense of original sin; a peer of the realm, he championed liberty in his works and deeds, giving money, time, energy, and finally his life to the Greek war of independence. His faceted personality found expression in satire, verse narrative, ode, lyric, speculative drama, historical tragedy, confessional poetry, dramatic monologue, seriocomic epic, and voluminous correspondence, written in Spenserian stanzas, heroic couplets, blank verse, terza rima, ottava rima, and vigorous prose.
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