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In 1937, T. S. Eliot described Byron as the Romantic poet 'most nearly remote from the sympathies of every living critic,' and called for 'half a dozen essays' in order 'to see what agreement could be reached.' Eliot's own contribution to this putative critical consensus makes curious reading now. After some brilliant if glancing appreciations and aperçus—Byron as a Scottish poet, the narrative gifts exemplified in a verse tale like The Giaour, the precision of the satire on English society in the last cantos of Don Juan—Eliot insists that he has addressed only 'the qualities and defects visible in his work, and important in estimating [Byron's] work,' not 'the private life, with which I am not concerned.'
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