DOI: 10.3828/bj.2023.17 ISSN: 0301-7257

Lord Byron and the Free Press: A Burkean Outlook?

Ioannes P. Chountis
  • Literature and Literary Theory
  • History

This article endeavours to resolve the apparent inconsistencies between Lord Byron’s advocation of the free press and his suppression of the revolutionary press in Missolonghi. The novel approach uses a methodological framework based on recent studies on Byron’s forms of thinking and Edmund Burke’s ideas on prudential judgement and rejection of metaphysical abstraction in political matters. After a brief outline of Byron’s experience of censorship and a short analysis of The Vision of Judgement , his clash with Stanhope and motives to suppress The Greek Chronicles are investigated. The set of ideas articulated by Burke is used as a prism to interpret Byron’s actions and resolve prima facie inconsistencies. Overall, it is suggested that Byron’s relativist and sceptical outlook was subtly Burkean in regard to the free press, a framework that could be used in future research to resolve further questions in Byron studies.