Dr. Kate Lister
π€ SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
But his does.
It's like a rock star dropping an album that everybody can't stop talking about.
they're like i can't believe what this guy's getting up to or is this are these people who share his ideas of sort of free love and living in a different way well when you read child howard's pilgrimage you'll probably be a bit disappointed with it because you come to it thinking it's going to be like some rock and roll memoir of debauchery and excess and it's really like a meditation on the emotional experiences of traveling through europe you're like where
Where's the sex?
But at the time, it just lit the fuse paper of this emotional backdrop that was happening in London at the time.
Maybe it was all the revolutions that had been happening, the Enlightenment being ushered in.
And then suddenly there's this voice about this man that's very in touch with his emotional, erotic and sexual awakening.
And it was a huge hit, mostly with the aristocracy, because its first edition, which sold out in days, by the way, that cost, I think it was 50 shillings to buy that, the first edition of it.
So these are rich people who are buying this.
And to answer your other question, yeah, there were very strict moral rules at the time, but
Who those rules applied to and how they were applied is a whole other discussion.
If you are a very, very, very rich member of the aristocracy, you can cover yourself pretty well because you've got the money and the space to be able to get away from scandal, but that doesn't mean you're immune to it.
And Byron, when he goes on his grand tour, he deliberately goes to Greece and to Turkey and to Armenia because he knows that these are cultures where homosexual relationships are not only not taboo, but quite open.
He writes in his letters at the time, that's what he's going for.
And we can't flinch away from it, is that he wanted to have sex with young men.
He referred to them as hyacinths in his many, many letters to his friends that he was going to go and pick as many hyacinths as he could.
And he was going to cull these hyacinths.
Yes, that's pretty much what they're doing.
So you've got to imagine that Romanticism is born out of the Enlightenment movement, which leads up to the French Revolution, the American Revolution.
And there's a heavy emphasis on rationality, despite the fact that these revolutions were often very irrational revolutions.