Home > Authors Index > Browse all available works of Lord Byron > Text of Song For The Luddites
A poem by Lord Byron |
||
Song For The Luddites |
||
________________________________________________
Title: Song For The Luddites Author: Lord Byron [More Titles by Byron] Song for the Luddites.[1] AS the Liberty lads o'er the sea 2. When the web that we weave is complete, 3. Though black as his heart its hue, December 24, 1816.
[The term "Luddites" dates from 1811, and was applied first to frame-breakers, and then to the disaffected in general. It was derived from a half-witted lad named Ned Lud, who entered a house in a fit of passion, and destroyed a couple of stocking-frames. The song was an impromptu, enclosed in a letter to Moore of December 24, 1816. "I have written it principally," he says, "to shock your neighbour [Hodgson?] who is all clergy and loyalty--mirth and innocence--milk and water." See _Letters_, 1900, iv. 30; and for General Lud and "Luddites," see _Letters_, 1898, ii. 97, note 1.] [The end] GO TO TOP OF SCREEN |