The poem's main merit lies in its comparison of
English and
Italian morals, arguing that the English aversion to
adultery is mere
hypocrisy in light of the probably shocking, but more honest, custom of the
Cavalier Servente in Italy. In comparison to Byron's
Oriental Tales of 1813, it suggests that a looser attitude towards morals may be more pragmatic. The poem manifests a number of typical Byronic qualities, like the digressive structure and the use of satirical jabs at targets familiar to Byron's readership, such as literate women and as well as other poets (including
Robert Southey, who appears as "Botherby"). As he does in major poems like ''
Childe Harold's Pilgrimage and Don Juan, in Beppo'' Byron mixes fictional elements with autobiographical ones. Reputedly,
Lady William Russell was the inspiration for "
[one] whose bloom could, after dancing, dare the dawn". The four verses or stanzas added to
Beppo in the fourth edition (1818) are Stanzas 28, 38, 39, and 80. Stanza 28: "Like a picture by Giorgione" (Added to expand on the description of Venetian women). Stanzas 38 & 39: (Added to expand on the description of the Carnival and the narrator's commentary). Stanza 80: (Added as part of the satirical commentary near the end of the poem). ==References==