Her publisher describes Julia Markusâ Lady Byron and her Daughters as âa startling re-evaluation of Lady Byronâs marriage and the untold story of her complex life as single mother and progressive forceâ. Untold? Not quite. I count at least four previous biographies devoted to Annabella Byron, another four about her daughter, and several concerning their shared circle. In fact, defences of Lady Byron have emerged periodically since Harriet Beecher Stowe published Lady Byron Vindicated in 1870.
Where Markus is most âstartlingâ is in her condemnation of Byronists such as Malcolm Elwin, Doris Langley Moore and Joan Pierson for failing to be adequately sympathetic to Lady Byron. But a cursory survey suggests that recent scholars have documented her poet-husbandâs bad behaviour in far more forensic detail than Markus. Fiona MacCarthy reports that Lady Byron found a copy of the Marquis de Sadeâs Justine in her husbandâs trunk; Peter Cochran says Byron fired pistols at the ceiling while his wife gave birth in the upstairs room of their Piccadilly house.
Those details â and many others â find no place in Markusâ whirlwind tour of this well-trodden path. It is symptomatic of a larger problem: vagueness. She twice refers to âthe freewheeling days of the Regencyâ, while âthe Romantic imagination allowed a poet such as Byron to break though the settled barriers of tradition in order to pierce through to nature â human and divine â in thrilling new waysâ. Such generalities curdle into nothingness, such as her claim that the Brownings âcreated poetry in reaction to the Romanticsâ.
This penchant for imprecision extends effortlessly to facts: the childhood sexual abuse of Byron by his nurse âis rarely referred toâ, she says, quoting Leslie Marchand. But he was writing in the 1950s; subsequent biographers talk about it constantly. Elsewhere, she says that Byron was homosexual, thus avoiding the word âephebophileâ, which is what he was. Conversely, some of Byronâs friends, including William Bankes and John Cam Hobhouse, did have homosexual proclivities, although Markus appears unaware of it. Instead she takes for granted that Medora Leigh was the offspring of Byronâs incestuous union with his half-sister, passing silently over the many arguments against it â including those that fill the pages of G. Wilson Knightâs Lord Byronâs Marriage: The Evidence of Asterisks (1957).
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At times, sentimentality gets the better of Markus, bringing with it a rich harvest of falsehood: Lady Byronâs father was âa sweet ineffectual Don Quixoteâ; Annabella âthe Lioness protecting her cubâ; Byron âwas, as so many of his protagonists â and so many a charming addict â a tortured soulâ. This is aggravated by Markusâ desire to âdoâ her characters in different voices â that is, their inner voices. It doesnât work, and lapses into nonsense when she appropriates family names such as Hen, Crow and (most outlandishly) Porpoise. When unable to use nicknames, she inserts needless qualifiers: âpublisher John Murrayâ, âfriend Charles Dickensâ, âsocialist Owenâ. Not irritated enough? Readers must contend with modern-day Americanisms, applied as if anachronism were no obstacle to understanding: âthe real estate market remained stagnantâ, Annabellaâs mother âacted out emotionallyâ, Byron âtook a swing at a buddyâ.
The more successful part of this book addresses the historical period in which Markus is at home â the later 19th century. This may explain why the writing becomes more fluent, but also more perfunctory, as it progresses. Although her affection for such figures as Anna Jameson and the Brownings seems to give Markus confidence, it also prompts her to lose focus; for a while they hog the limelight to the exclusion of all else. Perhaps the real problem is her subject, who she has decided is too immaculate to be other than insipid. Which alerts us to the underlying problem with Lady Byron and her Daughters as a whole: it lacks conviction.
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Duncan Wu is professor of English, Georgetown University. He is author, most recently, of 30 Great Myths about the Romantics (2015).
Lady Byron and Her Daughters
By Julia Markus
W. W. Norton, 384pp, ÂŁ18.99
ISBN 9780393082685
Published 13 October 2015
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