BEPPO (POEM)
'''Beppo''' is a poem by Lord Byron, written at Venice in 1818. ''Beppo'' marks Byron's first attempt at writing in the Italian ''ottava rima'' metre which encouraged his inclination for satiric digression. In this, it is the precursor to Byron's most famous, and generally considered his best, poem, ''Don Juan''.
The poem, called "A Venetian Story", tells the story of a Venetian Lady, Laura, whose husband Beppo (short for Giuseppe) has been lost at sea for the past three years. According to Venetian customs, and without shedding too many tears, she finally takes on a ''Cavalier Servente'', simply called the Count. But when the two of them attend the Venetian Carnival, where she is duly admired for her beauty by all the men, she is closely observed by a Turk, who turns out to be her missing husband. Beppo explains that he has been captured and enslaved, but was freed by a band of pirates that he joined. Now, with the money he made through his life of piracy, he has returned to be re-baptized and reclaim his wife. Laura returns to Beppo, and he and the Count become 'friends'.
The poem's main merit lies in its comparison of English and Italian morals, arguing that the English aversion to adultery is mere hypocrisy in light of the probably shocking, but more honest custom of the ''Cavalier Servente'' in Italy. Also, it seeks to show that, in comparison to Byron's ''Oriental Tales'' of 1813, this more lax attitude towards morals may be more beneficial to all participants.
The poem manifests a number of typical Byronic qualities: it is digressive in its structure, for example, and it takes satiric jabs at targets familiar to readers of Byron, such as literary woman and other poets (including Robert Southey, who appears as "Botherby"). As he does in major poems like Childe Harold's Pilgrimage and Don Juan, Byon mixes fictional elements with elements of autobiography in ''Beppo''.
Reputedly, Lady William Russell was the inspiration for one ''whose bloom could, after dancing, dare the dawn''.
| Contents |
| Narrative |
| Analysis and allusions |
Narrative
The poem, called "A Venetian Story", tells the story of a Venetian Lady, Laura, whose husband Beppo (short for Giuseppe) has been lost at sea for the past three years. According to Venetian customs, and without shedding too many tears, she finally takes on a ''Cavalier Servente'', simply called the Count. But when the two of them attend the Venetian Carnival, where she is duly admired for her beauty by all the men, she is closely observed by a Turk, who turns out to be her missing husband. Beppo explains that he has been captured and enslaved, but was freed by a band of pirates that he joined. Now, with the money he made through his life of piracy, he has returned to be re-baptized and reclaim his wife. Laura returns to Beppo, and he and the Count become 'friends'.
Analysis and allusions
The poem's main merit lies in its comparison of English and Italian morals, arguing that the English aversion to adultery is mere hypocrisy in light of the probably shocking, but more honest custom of the ''Cavalier Servente'' in Italy. Also, it seeks to show that, in comparison to Byron's ''Oriental Tales'' of 1813, this more lax attitude towards morals may be more beneficial to all participants.
The poem manifests a number of typical Byronic qualities: it is digressive in its structure, for example, and it takes satiric jabs at targets familiar to readers of Byron, such as literary woman and other poets (including Robert Southey, who appears as "Botherby"). As he does in major poems like Childe Harold's Pilgrimage and Don Juan, Byon mixes fictional elements with elements of autobiography in ''Beppo''.
Reputedly, Lady William Russell was the inspiration for one ''whose bloom could, after dancing, dare the dawn''.
This article provided by Wikipedia. To edit the contents of this article, click here for original source.
psst.. try this: add to faves

العربية
中国
Français
Deutsch
Ελληνική
हिन्दी
Italiano
日本語
Português
Русский
Español