What has been said of Petrarch, that his correspondence and verses together afford the progressive interest of a narrative In which the poet is always identified with the man, will be found applicable, in a far greater degree, to Lord Byron, in whom the literary and the personal character were so closely interwoven, that to have left his works without the instructive commentary which his Life and Correspondence afford, would have been equally an injustice both to himself and to the world.
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