Darkness By Lord Byron Mood

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Darkness The poem “Darkness” by Lord Byron was a statement to society about the potential apocalypse and superstition of his time. Byron uses a dramatic shift to change the mood of the poem; he also uses literary devices like imagery and symbolism to intensify the the dark mood he intended for his work. Byron based his work on the influences of his time; the idea that the sun would burn itself out, this philosophy was created by an Italian philosopher that predicted that this event would destroy the world. This prediction caused mass hysteria due to the dark and overcast skies of the summer and the increase in sunspot activity; as well as the scheduled solar eclipse and the eruption of Mount Tambora. These events promoted Byron's work because…show more content…
He brought the shift right at the beginning of the work.he wrote”I had a dream, which wasn’t a dream at all” he did this to cast doubt on the reader and show just how real the prediction of the apocalypse was. Byron wrote with no intention of hope or religion; in fact he almost mocked the idea. He wrote as if to show the realistic side of human nature and the selfishness of mankind. He wrote about how people would pray a useless prayer for light and slowly would lose their humanity. He included the idea of the last two men on earth were enemies but the struggle for survival was stronger than their distaste for each other. Byron used an intense amount imagery to describe the terrors that were predicted to come; for example he wrote “The bright sun was extinguished , and the stars did wander darkling in the eternal space Rayless, and pathless, and the icy earth swung blind in the moonless air Morn came and went- and came, and brought no day.” he uses this imagery to explain the eerie darkness without the sun. He uses such an intense amount throughout the work so that the reader was able to have a clear idea of the destruction of humanity and the

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