Lord Byron
Manfred (1817):
Things to consider:
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Role of Spirits (compare, for example, those in Coleridge's Ancient
Mariner)
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Bounds of Knowledge (Scientific and Intimate)
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Power of Speech/Language
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Relationship to Nature
Discussion Questions:
General:
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Is Manfred a sympathetic character? Explain.
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Does Manfred get what he deserves? Feel free to interpret this question
however you want.
Act One:
660:
-
Describe Manfred's emotional state at the beginning of the play.
661:
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Explain: What is a “tyrant-spell” (1.1.12)?
663:
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What phenomenon is being described in 1.1.116-19?
664:
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What does Manfred request of the seven spirits? Why?
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What can't Manfred utter (1.1.138)?
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Explain: “We can but give thee that which we possess” (1.1.139).
665-67:
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Who is singing the Incantation?
666:
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Explain lines 1.1.254-57.
668:
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Why can't Manfred commit suicide?
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What might the eagle represent?
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Explain lines 1.2.39-45. How do these lines compare with Pope's
Essay on Man?
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Placed on this isthmus of a middle state,
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A being darkly wise, and rudely great:
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With too much knowledge for the sceptic side,
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With too much weakness for the stoic's pride,
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He hangs between; in doubt to act, or rest;
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In doubt to deem himself a god, or beast;
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In doubt his mind or body to prefer;
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Born but to die, and reasoning but to err; (Pope 2.3-10)
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Explain: “Oh, that I were / The viewless spirit of a lovely sound” (1.2.52-53).
-
These lines can be compared with Percy Shelley's “To a Skylark,”esp.
18-20 and 36-40, and Keats's “Ode to a Nightingale,” esp. 31-33.
669:
-
Explain Manfred's appeal to the avalanche (1.2.75-79).
670:
-
Why does the chamois hunter stop Manfred from committing suicide?
Act Two:
671:
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Of whose blood does the wine remind Manfred 92.1.24-30)?
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Explain: “Actions are our epochs” (2.1.52).
672:
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Is Manfred's view of the chamois hunter Wordsworthian? Explain.
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Explain: “My embrace was fatal” (2.1.88).
673:
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Explain lines 2.2.10-12. Does Manfred seek solitude or not?
Explain.
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Explain lines 2.2.39-41. What knowledge, if any, is he seeking?
674:
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Confessions of a Byronic Hero: To what degree are the experiences
Manfred describes in 2.2.50-83 Wordsworthian? To what degree are
they not?
675:
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Describe the relationship between Manfred and Astarte (the woman he
describes in 2.2.105-17).
676:
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Explain lines 2.2.140-50. How does Manfred compare with the Wandering
Jew? Explain.
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What bargain does the Witch of the Alps offer Manfred? Why does
he refuse it?
678-79:
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Who are the three Destinies? What is their relationship to humans?
How are they similar to the witches in MacBeth (see fn3, 769)?
680:
-
Who is Arimanes? Why have the spirits gathered before him?
Why is Manfred there?
680-81:
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Why does Manfred refuse to bow to Arimanes (2.4.37-42)?
681:
682:
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What is the significance of Astarte's name (see fn)?
683:
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Explain Manfred's speech to Astarte (2.4.117-50).
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Explain Astarte's responses (2.4.150-59).
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Explain: “This is to be mortal / And seek things beyond mortality”
(2.4.158-59).
684:
-
Explain: He “makes / His torture tributary to his will” (2.4.160-61).
Act Three:
685:
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Why has the Abbot come?
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What is he saying about Manfred's “noble name” (3.1.31-33)?
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Explain Manfred's words to the Abbot: “I shall not choose a mortal
/ To be my mediator” (3.1.54-55).
686:
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Explain Manfred's discussion of self-condemnation in 3.1.66-78.
687:
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Why does Manfred say “It is too late” (3.1.98)? Is it really?
Does the Abbot agree? Explain.
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Explain: “He / Must serve who fain would sway” (3.1.116-17).
689:
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Who is "thou earliest minister of the Almighty" (3.2.11)? Explain.
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Why is Manfred addressing the “Monarch of the climes”(3.2.20) in this
way?
690:
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According to Manuel, how does Manfred differ from his father, Count
Sigismund?
691:
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Explain the description of Nature in 3.4.3-7.
694:
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Explain Manfred's words to the spirits in 3.4.112-21.
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Explain Manfred's words to the spirits in 3.4.138-41.
695:
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Explain Manfred's final words (3.4.151).
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