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Quiz about Mad Bad and Dangerous to Know
Quiz about Mad Bad and Dangerous to Know

Mad, Bad and Dangerous to Know Quiz


Lady Caroline Lamb described Lord Byron as "Mad, bad and dangerous to know". A look at his tumultuous life, and to hell with the poetry!

A multiple-choice quiz by Englizzie. Estimated time: 7 mins.
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Author
Englizzie
Time
7 mins
Type
Multiple Choice
Quiz #
313,688
Updated
Jul 23 22
# Qns
10
Difficulty
Tough
Avg Score
6 / 10
Plays
608
Awards
Top 20% Quiz
- -
Question 1 of 10
1. Byron's education seems to have been fairly normal for the time. Which English 'public' (that is fee-paying, boarding) school did he attend? Hint


Question 2 of 10
2. Byron received savage anonymous criticism for his early collection of poetry in the 'Edinburgh Review', that he felt inspired to write his first major satirical piece - 'English Bards and Scotch Reviewers'. How did some angered critics react to this attack? Hint


Question 3 of 10
3. With his 'reckless disregard for money', piling up debts at home, Byron escaped to Europe from 1809 to 1811. A customary past-time for young nobleman, by what name was this jaunt generally known?

Answer: (Three Words with The)
Question 4 of 10
4. After many an adventure of a dubious nature in Greece, Byron returned home in 1811, and began his well-publicized and scandalous affair with the married Lady Caroline Lamb. It was a tumultuous coupling, of which Byron soon tired. How did Lady Caroline's behavior continue to scandalize society, potentially ruining both of them? Hint


Question 5 of 10
5. Having thrown Lady Caroline aside, Byron went on to woo and marry her cousin Annabella Millbanke. It was not a success (to say the least) and he treated her badly for not giving him a son. They separated, Lady Annabella taking their daughter Ada with her. The rumours began to circulate, fuelled by a jealous letter from Lady Caroline. Of what was Byron accused?

Hint


Question 6 of 10
6. In the summer of 1816 Byron settled in the Villa Diodati on Lake Geneva in Switzerland, where he befriended Percy Bysshe Shelley and the latter's future wife, Mary Godwin. Kept indoors by the 'incessant rain', the group's imagination took over and many fantastic tales emerged. A famous monster sprang from the mind of Shelley's wife, Mary. In her novel, what was the name of the man who created it?

Answer: (One Word)
Question 7 of 10
7. Byron went on to winter in Venice, embroiling himself in a string of tempestuous affairs, with one jilted lover throwing herself in the Venice canals. More importantly, while in Venice, Byron was introduced to and became fascinated by which Near Eastern culture and language? Hint


Question 8 of 10
8. In or around 1820, Byron had met and eloped with the very young, married Countess Guiccolli. They moved to Genoa, his final home in Italy. For three years they lived together but in 1823 Byron embarked on his next (and final) great adventure. What was it? Hint


Question 9 of 10
9. Together with the Greek revolutionaries, and despite his lack of military experience, in his heroic stance Byron made plans to attack the Turkish-held fortress of Lepanto. Why did this attack not take place? Hint


Question 10 of 10
10. It is believed that either Byron's heart or lungs were buried in Missolonghi, but the rest of his remains were sent back to England for burial in Westminster Abbey. The Abbey refused the remains on grounds of 'questionable morality'. When did they finally allow a memorial to be placed in Westminster Abbey's Poets' Corner? Hint



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Quiz Answer Key and Fun Facts
1. Byron's education seems to have been fairly normal for the time. Which English 'public' (that is fee-paying, boarding) school did he attend?

Answer: Harrow

After beginning his formal education at Aberdeen Grammar School, Lord Byron was sent to Harrow School in 1801. He had the dubious honor of representing Harrow in the cricket team for the first Eton and Harrow Match, which was played in 1805 at Lord's Cricket Ground in London. He went on to Trinity College, Cambridge.
2. Byron received savage anonymous criticism for his early collection of poetry in the 'Edinburgh Review', that he felt inspired to write his first major satirical piece - 'English Bards and Scotch Reviewers'. How did some angered critics react to this attack?

Answer: They challenged him to a duel.

Eventually all the fuss died down, and it became a prestigious battle scar for a critic to be slashed by Byron's acerbic pen.
3. With his 'reckless disregard for money', piling up debts at home, Byron escaped to Europe from 1809 to 1811. A customary past-time for young nobleman, by what name was this jaunt generally known?

Answer: The Grand Tour

Due to Napoleon's warring activities in most of Europe, Byron did not take the usual route for his tour, and headed directly for the Mediterranean. He travelled across Spain and on to Albania and then Athens.
4. After many an adventure of a dubious nature in Greece, Byron returned home in 1811, and began his well-publicized and scandalous affair with the married Lady Caroline Lamb. It was a tumultuous coupling, of which Byron soon tired. How did Lady Caroline's behavior continue to scandalize society, potentially ruining both of them?

Answer: She would appear uninvited and unwelcome at his house, sometimes disguised as a page-boy.

Lady Caroline became emotionally disturbed and began to 'stalk' Byron. On one of her secret visits to his house she scrawled 'Remember Me' on one of the books on his desk. She became so thin in her obsession that Byron remarked that he was 'being haunted by a skeleton'.

It was she who described Byron as 'mad, bad and dangerous to know'.
5. Having thrown Lady Caroline aside, Byron went on to woo and marry her cousin Annabella Millbanke. It was not a success (to say the least) and he treated her badly for not giving him a son. They separated, Lady Annabella taking their daughter Ada with her. The rumours began to circulate, fuelled by a jealous letter from Lady Caroline. Of what was Byron accused?

Answer: All of these

Byron was quoted as saying "Even to have such a thing said is utter destruction and ruin to a man, from which he can never recover". As a result, Byron left England in 1816 and, as it happened, was never to return. Once freed of the restraints of polite English society, he could now immerse himself in whatever aberrant behavior he wished.
6. In the summer of 1816 Byron settled in the Villa Diodati on Lake Geneva in Switzerland, where he befriended Percy Bysshe Shelley and the latter's future wife, Mary Godwin. Kept indoors by the 'incessant rain', the group's imagination took over and many fantastic tales emerged. A famous monster sprang from the mind of Shelley's wife, Mary. In her novel, what was the name of the man who created it?

Answer: Frankenstein

The summer of 1816, one of the wettest and coldest on record, not only proved to be the genesis of Mary Shelley's famous story. In addition, Byron's physician James Polidori, was staying at the villa. From bits and pieces of one of Byron's stories, Dr. Polidori wrote 'The Vampyre', which was became the originator for the Romantic vampire genre. Frankenstein is, of course, the name of the fictitious creator of the monster in Mary Shelley's novel.

The monster himself has no name.
7. Byron went on to winter in Venice, embroiling himself in a string of tempestuous affairs, with one jilted lover throwing herself in the Venice canals. More importantly, while in Venice, Byron was introduced to and became fascinated by which Near Eastern culture and language?

Answer: Armenian

With the assistance of the Mekhitarist Order of Monks in Venice, Byron was able to learn the Armenian language. He became thoroughly immersed in the Armenian culture and history, from which he wrote 'English Grammar and Armenian' in 1817, and also participated in the 'English/Armenian Dictionary', compiled in 1821. Byron's own writings in Armenian were a significant inspiration to future Armenian poetry.
8. In or around 1820, Byron had met and eloped with the very young, married Countess Guiccolli. They moved to Genoa, his final home in Italy. For three years they lived together but in 1823 Byron embarked on his next (and final) great adventure. What was it?

Answer: Joining the movement for Greek independence.

Approached by members of the Greek independence movement, Byron threw his full support behind them in their fight against the Ottoman Empire. He left Genoa in July of 1823, having spent a great deal of his own money to refit the Greek fleet. He arrived at the port of Missolonghi on the Gulf of Patras in western Greece at the end of 1823.
9. Together with the Greek revolutionaries, and despite his lack of military experience, in his heroic stance Byron made plans to attack the Turkish-held fortress of Lepanto. Why did this attack not take place?

Answer: Byron became ill and eventually died.

Byron initially became ill in February 1824. The standard treatment of the time was to bleed the patient. This remedy did nothing but weaken him still more. It is thought that his doctors carried out some procedure with unsterilized instruments which may have caused sepsis. The unfortunate Lord Byron died on April, 1824 at the age of 36.
10. It is believed that either Byron's heart or lungs were buried in Missolonghi, but the rest of his remains were sent back to England for burial in Westminster Abbey. The Abbey refused the remains on grounds of 'questionable morality'. When did they finally allow a memorial to be placed in Westminster Abbey's Poets' Corner?

Answer: 1969 - Men landed on the Moon

It took 145 years after his death for a lasting offical memorial to be placed in the Abbey. There was considerable lobbying both in England and the US for many years. The "New York Times" wrote, 'People are beginning to ask whether this ignoring of Byron is not a thing of which England should be ashamed ...' It is reported that Robert Ripley of 'Ripley's Believe It or Not' drew a picture of a boatswain's grave with the caption reading "Lord Byron's dog has a magnificant tomb, while Byron himself has none".

Apparently, this this came as such a shock and surprise to the English people, that private funds were raised to pay for a suitable memorial for one of their greatest poets.
Source: Author Englizzie

This quiz was reviewed by FunTrivia editor bloomsby before going online.
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