a paradox emphasized in the portrait of Napoleon drawn in Canto III of Childe Harold's Pilgrimage . "But quiet to quick bosoms is a hell. . . ." Typically, in Byron's narratives of male power, the very character traits that allow greatness destroy a man: "a fire / And motion of the soul" aspire "beyond the fitting medium of desire." "Quenchless" once ''kindled," this fire encompasses all, becoming "fatal to him who bears, to all who ever bore."
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The ardor that drove Napoleon to conquer the world inevitably forces him to the island of St. Helena. Byron describes him there in The Age of Bronze as an eagle reduced to nibbling at his cage, a man who occupies himself squabbling with his jailers about what he gets to eat. Yet even in ruin, he retains more dignity than the other rulers depicted in the poem. Bound on the rock of St. Helena, Napoleon calls on "earth, air, ocean, all that felt or feel / His power and glory."
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This image establishes another association with Napoleon, that of Prometheus. Myths of the Titans, especially of Prometheus, are central to considerations of human history in the poetry of Byron, Shelley, and Keats. In Byron's "Prometheus" the figure becomes representative of man as "part divine, / A troubled stream from a pure source." For Shelley, Prometheus is an "imaginary being" of the most "poetical character," described in the preface to Prometheus Unbound as "the type of the highest perfection of moral and intellectual nature, impelled by the purest and the truest motives to the best and noblest ends." Prometheus's gift of fire makes human consciousness possible. His name means "the forethinker," and it is he who knows who will overthrow Jupiter. Prometheus is endurance and wisdom and love.
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In Prometheus Unbound , Shelley sets out the possibilities for human revolution, regeneration, and renewal that he urged Byron and Keats to take as their poetic material. The lyrical drama takes place over eons, or in one hour, or in an instantand is set in the mind of Prometheus, in the mind of man, or in the universe. In this revision of Aeschylus's Prometheus Bound , Prometheus has cursed Jupiterthe tyrannical, patriarchal authority that men establish to rule and persecute themselvestherefore causing himself to be chained on a rock "eyeless in hate."
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When Prometheus "recalls" his curseremembers it, talks about it, takes it backhe can free himself from Jupiter's tyranny. Prometheus's love allows the earth to get back into its proper position, to turn on its axis, so that the ice of hatred thaws and the springs of affection flow.
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