Convincing
This book is about two great poets of the Romantic period, Percy
Bysshe Shelley and Lord Byron, and a small circle of men around
them. John Lauritsen makes a convincing case that all of
them were gay, albeit bisexually gay. However, he declines
to put a label on them, since he believes that there is a
homoerotic component in the psyche of virtually all males.
One needn't agree with him on that point. What Lauritsen
does do is examine the writings of these men for expressions of
homoeroticism (or male love, his preferred term). Sometimes
these expressions of male love are subtle, or need to be
de-coded, which he as a gay scholar is well qualified to
do. Other times, the expression of one man's love for
another almost leaps off the page. This is amazing, because
during the entire lifetimes of Shelley and Byron, men and even
adolescent boys in England were hanged for making love to each
other. It took courage on the part of these men to even
hint at love of males for males.
A hero of this story is Edward John Trelawny — big, butch and beautiful
— who is portrayed on the cover. Trelawny's declarations of love
for an older man, when he himself was a teenager, are virile and
passionate. Trelawny fell in love with Shelley at first sight,
and this love lasted for the rest of his long life (he died at
the age of 89). This is an elegantly written and produced
book. Lauritsen, writing with the art that conceals
scholarship, tells his story concisely, but with enough detail to
be convincing and exciting. After The Shelley-Byron Men, the Romantic poets will never be the same.
Amazon review by Kevin Jones