The poet Byron's poems, are Byron's poems really that good?

George gordon byron (1788- 1824) was a great English romantic poet in the early 9th century. His masterpieces include Childe Haller's Travels and Don Juan, and he created a number of Byronic heroes in his poems. He is not only a great poet, but also a fighter who struggled for his ideals all his life. He actively and bravely participated in the revolution-participated in the Greek national liberation movement and became one of the leaders.

In his short life, he left many brilliant poems to the world, among which the most famous are the magnificent long lyric narrative poems Childe Harold's Travels and Don Juan. In these brilliant works, which are praised as "lyric epics" by the world, Byron, a poet, used the creative technique of positive romanticism to integrate his personal experience of traveling in European countries into his works, and showed a vast and magnificent picture of the times with a broad vision and profound brushwork, expressing his lofty poet feelings and unyielding struggle vows. Byron's "lyric epic" presents a moving and beautiful scenery with the poet's wandering. "The exotic scenery from the Mediterranean to the Aegean Sea is unobstructed, from the rolling mountains of Portugal and the spectacular bullring of Spain to the solemn monuments of Greece and Rome and the mountains of Albania. There are not only the beautiful scenery along the Rhine, but also the twilight on the lake Geneva, St. Peter's Cathedral in the Vatican and the ancient battlefield in Waterloo. Byron first devoted his poet's unparalleled enthusiasm to describing the scenery of these countries, with the aim of inspiring the patriotic enthusiasm of the people in these countries and encouraging them to fight for the independence and liberation of the motherland. Byron deeply praised the sun, moon, oceans and mountains, and enthusiastically praised mythical heroes, ancient heroes, historical sites and cultural treasures, all in order to arouse people's will to resist and determination to struggle. Byron's enthusiasm is various, and Byron's works are sympathetic: he frequently sighs for the Spanish people enslaved and oppressed by the royal courts and ruling classes in Britain, Spain and Portugal. There are also lamentations in his works: he deeply mourned the tragic fate of the Greek people ravaged by Turkey's iron hoof. There are also praises in his works: sincere praise for rare treasures in ancient art, such as Apollo statues, laocoon sculptures, dying Gaul statues, Boccaccio and other relics of Renaissance masters. His works are even bolder: remembering Italy's past glory and inspiring Italian patriots to stand up and overthrow the tyranny of foreign invaders with high battle songs. The poet's enthusiasm is ubiquitous and unstoppable in his works, such as his lofty praise for the vastness of the ocean:

Pentium, your unfathomable indigo ocean!

Thousands of ships rushed at you, leaving no trace.

Another example is his poetic and touching description of the moon:

The moon rises; Oh, what a wonderful night!

The flowing moonlight pours on the waves;

Maybe girls are turned upside down by teenagers' love words,

As for us, let's wait until we get ashore to taste the taste!

In Byron's works, this romantic poet is always full of unrestrained enthusiasm. Although the tone of Byron's poems is sometimes fierce and sometimes ironic, whether full of pessimism or fighting pride, his poems are always saturated with lyrical atmosphere and deep feelings of loving monks. Not only that, the poet also used a lot of artistic techniques of narration and discussion in his poems, combined with the description of scenery, directly expressed his thoughts from touching the scene and told his incisive views on philosophy, society, politics, history, religion and art everywhere. Therefore, if Byron's lyric narrative poetry is outstanding, it is not only because of its broad vision and wonderful writing style, but also because of its rich and extensive humanistic knowledge connotation. Therefore, Byron's poems are well-deserved to be praised as "lyric epic" by the world.

Byron is a passionate poet, and his enthusiasm is mainly manifested in his dissatisfaction and resistance to reality. Faced with the injustice of the ruling class and the slavery and oppression of the working class, Byron put forward strong resistance and bitter irony in many poems, but Byron not only satirized the darkness of society, but also devoted his enthusiasm to the battle cry. He used all his arms to shout in a famous battle poem of Lutheranism:

When we finish knitting our own clothes,

When we use swords instead of looms,

We're going to put the cloth

The tyrant who threw it at your feet

We'll dye it with his blood.

As a romantic poet, Byron also put great enthusiasm into the perfect combination of lyric and narrative skills, showing the distinctive artistic characteristics of his poems and the special artistic charm of romantic new poems. The "lyric epic" shows a magnificent and shocking picture of the times: Spain is filled with the smoke of Napoleon's war of aggression, Italy is trembling under the iron hoof of Austria, and Greece is groaning under the slavery of Turkey. In The Trend of Thought, Byron sadly described the sufferings and sorrows of the oppressed people and mercilessly exposed the greed and cruelty of the oppressors and aggressors. He paid tribute to the battlefield of Waterloo and commented on Napoleon's merits and demerits. He sang proudly in the beautiful lake Geneva, amid the lakes and mountains, praising Rousseau, Voltaire and other enlighteners' lofty ideals of freedom and equality. In Greece, when the poet was in the ancient battlefield of Yu Guangrong, he couldn't help feeling strong and passionate. He expressed deep sympathy for the fate of the Greek people who were being oppressed by foreign countries, and at the same time expressed dissatisfaction and resentment that they had forgotten the brilliant achievements of their ancient ancestors. He wants to wake people up with brilliant battle songs and change their indifferent and muddled negative attitude towards the fate of the motherland.