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Lord Byron as a satirist in verse

Chapter 18: VITA
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About This Book

This dissertation examines Byron's satiric verse, presenting a working definition of the satiric spirit and narrowing its field to non-dramatic poetry. It surveys forms and methods—formal/classical satire, mock-heroic, epigram, political ballad, fable, and burlesque—and argues for inclusion of invective where appropriate. The study analyzes the distinctive temper and techniques of Byron's satire, traces influences including Italian models, classifies individual poems by intention and manner, and considers the interplay of humor, denunciation, and aesthetic quality while excluding biographical narrative and works judged unliterary to focus on critical and stylistic features of his verse-satire.

VITA

Claude Moore Fuess, the author of this dissertation, was born at Waterville, New York, January 12, 1885, and prepared for college at the Waterville High School, graduating in 1901. He took the full course of four years at Amherst College, graduating with the degree of B. A. in 1905. During 1905–1907, he was in residence at Columbia University, where he took courses in English and Comparative Literature under Professors G. R. Carpenter, W. A. Neilson, W. P. Trent, J. B. Fletcher, J. E. Spingarn, Brander Matthews, J. W. Cunliffe, G. P. Krapp, and W. W. Lawrence. He received the degree of M. A. from Columbia in 1906, and in 1906–7 was University Fellow in English and Editor of the English Graduate Record. In 1907–8, he was Head of the Department of English in George School, George School, Pa., and from 1908–10 was Instructor in English at Phillips Academy, Andover, Mass., studying abroad at Oxford during the summer of 1910. After a third year of residence at Columbia in 1910–11, he returned to Phillips Academy, where he is at present Instructor in English.