Lord Byron's 'She Walks In Beauty'

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Poems have long been said to contain meaning that makes you scratch beneath the surface to get the full interpretation. While analyzing "She Walks in Beauty", I was in awe by how the author Lord Byron was able to piece together a poem that was so relate-able to the majority on the topic of love. The way we structured his poem, selected his words, in not only the word that was actually selected but the length of the word itself, was nothing less than magical. Byron was able to paint a vivid image in your head that carried substance to whoever has fallen in deep love with someone else before. Poetic forms combine with sound devices and imagery to create meaning by continuously placing an image in one's mind and by being able to control the overall tone of the poem. …show more content…

The poem is about the innocence and beauty of this woman that has captured his man's heart. In his eyes, she is so pure and has no flaws associated with her name. When speaking on this woman, Byron says things like "She walks in beauty like the night....and all that's best of dark and bright." Using this simile Byron shows that she is able to pull these complete opposite things together which shows the regards that he has for this woman. He speaks of her "nameless grace" that she possesses, and caps it off with a third stanza line that really is able to resonate in the reader. To describe the innocence and tenderness of this woman, Byron says "And on that cheek, and o'er that brow, So soft, so calm, yet eloquent..." He puts them all together instead of spacing them out, so you can see his emphasis of the purity that this girl displays. As you read this, you are forced to think of love in the purest form for another being the way Byron sees his love for this

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