Monday, November 18, 2013

Mad, Bad and Dangerous to Know

In anticipation that these brief essays have captured the attention of any still eager to explore the Byronic hero, this concluding post offers additional thoughts to ponder and avenues to explore.

Rick, from the 1942 romantic drama, Casablanca, is also a Byronic hero. He resigns himself to brooding introspection and harbors bitter resentment against Ilsa. Finally, Rick must choose between love and duty.
James Dean typifies the Byronic hero in each of his three movies. His characters always moody and antagonistic, Dean plays the loner, the last man standing against the world. Oddly enough, his given name is James Byron Dean.
Agent 007, commonly known as James Bond, is another character persistently cast as Byronic. In his arrogance and intelligence coupled with recklessness, Bond displays Byronic tendencies.

Authors as well as characters can display Byronic qualities. Certainly, the best example is George Gordon, Lord Byron, himself, the name source for this topic hero. Consider also Edgar Allen Poe, Herman Melville, and perhaps Nathaniel Hawthorne.

Other literary characters worth mentioning for study are Jean Valjean (Les Miserables), Sydney Carton (A Tale of Two Cities), Captain Ahab (Moby Dick), Ben-Hur (Ben-Hur), and James Steerforth (David Copperfield).