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Adrião Pereira da Cunha's avatar

The poem feels like watching the world slowly exhale its last breath, not with drama but with a terrifying, suffocating quiet. What moves me most is how Byron shows humanity collapsing the moment light disappears as if without the sun, people forget how to love, how to hope, how to be human. The burning of palaces and huts alike reveals a world where every difference dissolves into the same desperate fear. The trembling animals, the silent birds, even war returning out of hunger make the darkness feel almost alive. The faithful dog is the poem’s most heartbreaking pulse the last fragile echo of loyalty in a universe that has stopped caring. And the two survivors dying at the sight of each other captures the final truth: the real horror is not the darkness outside, but the darkness we see in one another when everything else is stripped away. In the end, Darkness doesn’t conquer she simply remains, because she is all that’s left.

Andrew May's avatar

I loved bringing this to my 11th graders in Romanticism. It was such a good wallop over the head after spending time with Wordsworth's sublime revelation. A fine choice, dude. Much appreciated!

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