Thursday, May 23, 2019

Don Juan: Lord Byron †Summary and Critical Analysis Essay

Don Juan is a vast creation and it is not ceaselessly interesting there are many dull stanzas in which Byron says nothing interesting. hardly despite some weaknesses in structure, characterization, and philosophy of life, Don Juan is an epic circus. It has scope, variety of human experience, common sense, much matter for laughter, clever and witty observation, ease and fluency that is why Walter Scott said the it has the variety of Shakespeare. Don Juan was intended as a satire on abuses of the present states of society. It is a quietly mocking satire on everything, and a serious satire on the hypocrisies of high society, the phoney glory associated with war, mans pursuit of fame, the little devices by which people try to deceive themselves, the human penchant for rationalization, It ridicules things in a unique tongue-in impertinence manner that strikes, without agnizeming to, everything on its way. In general, the style, of Don Juan is the easy conversational or epistolary st yle.See more how to write a corking hypercritical analysis essayByron has written this poem in the Italian ottava rima, or eight-line stanza, the poetic form favoured by the Italian satirical writers of mock-heroic romances. The rhyme scheme of ottava rima is abababcc. But Byron used a lot of a new comic rhyme, forcing slant and unusual rhymes to hint at the incongruity and satires beneath. He has also used the utmost couplet to round off the whole stanza by giving a sudden twist or commentary on the preceding lines themselves. The witticism and the anti-climax, or a swift fall from the lofty-sounding idea to the low, that surprises the reader are also other features in Don Juan. The style of Don Juan is the antithesis of the grand style. It has the easy going away laxity of ordinary conversation. In fact, Don Juan has not one style but a multiplicity of styles or tones, the medley style grave, gay, serious, ludicrous, sentimental, laughing, ironic cynical, urbanely, naughty, wit tily outrageous, unexpectedly twisting familiar figures of speech and infusing them with fresh vitality, and accomplishing all these along with the most ingenious poetic devices of rhythm and rhyme imaginable.It stands in debt to the Italian comic-epic poets for its ottava rima indite form, its manner and mood, deliberate lack of coherent construction, length determined by the will of whimsy of the poet, variety of incidents and digressions, and for the startling alternations of mood and pervasive modernity of spirit. The fast movement from romantic seriousness to burlesque suggests a Chaucerian quality, the same movement between romance and burlesque, chivalry and bawdry, ideal and real. Perhaps the most conspicuous lineament of the Junoesque style is the conversational and colloquial tone. What the poem most frequently attacks, in love religion, and social relations, are very considerable vices-sham, hypocrisy, complacency, oppression, greed, and lust. Furthermore, the satire c onstantly though silently assumes as more all positives the qualities of courage, loyalty, generosity and above all, total candor, it merely implies that these virtues are excessively rare, and that the modern world is not accomplished to reward to encourage, or even to recognize them when they make their appearance.The society and civilization represented by Don Juans mother, Julia and their community is the most important tendency of satire in Canto I. They believe in the morality of exhibition if they appear moral. It doesnt matter what they do They suppress in all possible ways the natural impulses of the natural child or man. This issue brings us to another crucial thematic concern of Don Juan Juans mother, like a ordinary civilized person tires (though hypocritically and unsuccessfully) to thwart all the natural desires of the child while she tries to teach him all the dead languages, religious sermons that he cant understand, the art of war to the child (riding, fencing, gunnery and how to climb a fortress or a nunnery), expurgated classics (which posed problem with filthy loves of the gods and goddesses who roamed in public without correct bodices), and the likes.But one should note that his mother used to read all the filthy stories herself. But a few stanzas later we find that his mother doesnt care when Juan begins to have immoral relations with her neighbor Julia, because she was angry with Julias old husband who had rejected her love in her youth. Where then does a good education go (beyond a hypocritical theory) in this scheme of things in a civilized society? Don Juans mother is afraid to see him grow up into an adolescent This tells us how our societies reject the natural processes of life and the realities of natural impulses, and seeming to be better than the nature itself, destroy all potential good in man.

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