Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Written completely in blank verse, ‘Darkness’ by George Gordon, more commonly known as Lord Byron, taps into a fear for the future of the human race through an almost ‘epic’ style of poetic storytelling.

    • Female
    • October 9, 1995
    • Poetry Analyst And Editor
  2. "Darkness" is Lord Byron's terrible tale of apocalypse and despair. In this narrative poem, a speaker dreams of a future in which the sun burns out and the whole world is left in darkness. Panicking, the survivors of this catastrophe gradually destroy all remaining life in their efforts to survive.

  3. Byron wrote Darknessin July-August 1816. The poem is at least partly influenced by the mass hysteria of the time brought about by an Italian astronomer’s prediction that the sun would burn itself out on July 18th, thus destroying the world.

  4. Mar 6, 2015 · Darkness Poem By Lord Byron - Analysis & Summary. First published in 1816. I had a dream, which was not all a dream. The bright sun was extinguish’d, and the stars. Did wander darkling in the eternal space, Rayless, and pathless, and the icy earth. Swung blind and blackening in the moonless air; Morn came and went–and came, and brought no day,

  5. During the dark, wet and unpleasant summer of 1816 in Europe, George Gordon Byron, also known as Lord Byron, penned the poem Darkness. That summer Lord Byron spent time near Lake Geneva, Switzerland with Mary Shelley and John William Polidori who wrote Frankenstein and The Vampyre, respectively.

  6. Summary. In ‘A Dream within a Dream,’ Edgar Allan Poe (Bio | Poems) implies that time is slipping away from the grasp of human beings a la sand on the beach, indicating that our existence is at the end, inconsequent or a mere abstraction. In the first stanza, the narrator demands a farewell kiss on the brow. Although the kiss indicates the ...

  7. People also ask

  8. Mar 9, 2020 · In summary, the poem sees Wordsworth revisiting the ‘banks of the Wye’, the river that flows through England and Wales, five years after he was last there. In fairly regular blank verse, Wordsworth admires the ‘murmur’ of the water, the greenery of the scene, and the seclusion that such surroundings provide.

  1. People also search for