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125 pages, Paperback
First published July 15, 2015

What an antithetical mind! - tenderness, roughness - delicacy, coarseness - sentiment, sensuality - soaring and grovelling, dirt and deity - all mixed up in that one compound of inspired clay!
It seems strange; a true voluptuary will never abandon his mind to the grossness of reality. It is by exalting the earthly, the material, the physique of our pleasures, by veiling these ideas, by forgetting them altogether, or, at least, never naming them hardly to one's self, that we alone can prevent them from disgusting.
[Journal entry, 13 December 1813]
Some early reviewers of Don Juan complained that the poem wasn't true to experience because it blended different states and moods, linked pleasure and pain, levity and seriousness, and made life generally seem more confusing than it really needed to be. One critic put the point by saying that, in real life, 'we are never scorched and drenched at the same time.' The poet begged to differ:
Blessings on his experience! … Did he never walk a mile in hot weather? Did he never spill a dish of tea over his testicles in handing a cup to his charmer, to he great shame of his nankeen breeches? Did he never swim in the sea at Noonday with the Sun in his eyes and on his head, which all the foam of the Ocean could not cool?
[Letter to John Murray, 12 August 1819]
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