The Terrible Beauty of Cavalry and the Charge of the British Heavy Brigades at Waterloo

Authors

Donna LANDRY

Synopsis

This study presents a combination of aesthetics and ideology “in the spirit of Mickey”. In this sense, the aestheticization of violence in W. B. Yeats’s famous refrain is used as a guiding principle in the investigation of British Waterloo writings that focus on mounted warfare. Both eye-witness and eye-witness-based accounts of cavalry charges – the moment of most terrible beauty at Waterloo – are considered and two literary accounts are discussed and set in opposition: George Gordon, Lord Byron’s Childe Harold Canto III (1816) and William Makepeace Thackeray’s Vanity Fair (1848).

Published

March 12, 2026

How to Cite

(Ed.). (2026). The Terrible Beauty of Cavalry and the Charge of the British Heavy Brigades at Waterloo. In NAVIGATING CULTURAL IDENTITIES AND HISTORIES. IN MEMORIAM MIHAELA IRIMIA (1951–2022) (pp. 149-162). Bucharest University Press. https://doi.org/10.48154/b2_26/11