The branch of learning of Byron\\'s The Vision of Judgment is incompletely written material and partly political, but its spring was Byron\\'s loathing of Cant and lip service.
On the modification of King George III, old, mad, and blind, in 1820, the Poet Laureate Robert Southey produced a laudatory literary work. Written in unrhymed hexameter, its attempts at self-respect achieved no more than a banal ostentation. But far worse was its false piety and obsequious highness. Entitled \\"The Vision of Judgment\\" it showed George III\\'s conclusion entrance into the computer scientist of promised land and the denouncement of his enemies. To Byron, the deliberate flattery of a King, who was at prizewinning second-rate and at pessimum tyrannical, was amazingly distasteful.