Don Juan: Canto I by George Gordon Byron, Lord
The legend of Don Juan is one that's been told and retold over the centuries by poets and novelists. His life has been the subject of operas, musicals and film. The earliest reference...
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The legend of Don Juan is one that's been told and retold over the
centuries by poets and novelists. His life has been the subject of
operas, musicals and film. The earliest reference was in a
fourteenth century Spanish play and compiled in book form in the
seventeenth century. His life continued to fascinate writers like
Moliere, Byron, Bernard Shaw, Pushkin, Shakespeare, Jose Saramago
and musicians like Mozart, whose Don Giovanni is a brilliant work
that still charms audiences and music lovers all over the world.
The legend of Don Juan in Spain portrays him as a wealthy and
amoral character, who prides himself on his marvelous power to
attract women of all ages. He also spends the rest of his time
gambling and drinking. Occasionally, he indulges in crimes like
murder when thwarted in fulfilling his desires. Don Juan's name has
become synonymous in English and many other languages with being a
flirt and a womanizer. However, in Don Juan by George Gordon Byron,
the serial heartbreaker is portrayed as a much wronged innocent who
is instead easily taken in by women. This epic, satirical poem
which runs into more than 16,000 lines remains unfinished as Byron
continued to add verses till his death. It is interesting to note
that the English pronunciation of Juan is used throughout the poem,
to rhyme with words like “ruin” and “true one.” In Don Juan: Canto
I, Byron describes the rake's early years in Seville. The young
Juan begins his infamous career at the age of sixteen by launching
into a relationship with an older woman. Her outraged husband sets
a posse of citizens to investigate the matter and they hope to
catch the couple misbehaving. But Juan proves too savvy for them
and when they burst into the lady's bedroom, he conceals himself
under the bed! The entire episode is told in a farcical tone and
ends with Juan being sent away by his mother to further his
education, while his partner in crime is banished to a nunnery!
Byron hoped to write something that was similar in form and tone to
his earlier work, Beppo, which was much admired. He sourced his
material for Don Juan from various Spanish texts and uses a
sardonic tone to describe events and people who are really neither
admirable nor heroic. After his self imposed exile to Italy and
Spain following a scandalous separation from his wife, Byron
immersed himself in the works of Italian and Spanish writers. Don
Juan is one of the works that arose from this period. It is
considered an original, brilliant and path breaking work in English
literature and is an entertaining read for Byron enthusiasts.
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