Lord Byron

Childe Harold's Pilgrimage (With Byron's Biography)


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target="_blank" rel="nofollow" href="#ulink_3cb91f28-d0f4-5a0d-ab3f-0a790155fba4">160 [For an account of Ali Pasha (1741-1822), see Letters, 1898, i. 246, note.]

      The paraphrase "Teian Muse" recurs in the song, "The Isles of Greece," Don Juan, Canto III.]

      But in Spenser "ruth" means sorrow as well as pity, and three weeks after Childe Harold was published, Ali committed a terrible crime, the outcome of an early grief. On March 27, 1812, in revenge for wrongs done to his mother and sister nearly thirty years before, he caused 670 Gardhikiots to be massacred in the khan of Valiare, and followed up the act of treachery by sacking, plundering, and burning the town of Gardiki, and, "in direct violation of the Mohammedan law," carrying off and reducing to slavery the women and children.—Finlay's Hist. of Greece (edited by Rev. H. F. Tozer, 1877), vi. 67, 68.]

      "Amidst these isles a lone recess is found,

       Where circling shores the subject flood resound ...

       Within the waves repose in peace serene;

       Black forests nod above, a silvan scene!"]

      'Robbers all at Parga!

       Robbers all at Parga!'

       Κλέφτεις ποτὲ Πάργα!

       Κλέφτεις ποτὲ Πάργα!

      And as they roared out this stave, they whirled round the fire, dropped, and rebounded from their knees, and again whirled round as the chorus was again repeated."—Travels in Albania, i. 166, 167.]

      Long afterwards, in 1816, one evening, on the Lake of Geneva, Byron entertained Shelley, Mary, and Claire with "an Albanian song." They seem to have felt that such melodies "unheard are sweeter." Hence, perhaps, his petit nom, "Albè," that is, the "Albaneser."—Life of Shelley, by Edward Dowden, 1896, p. 309.]