Moopuna
Site Search:    

Term Papers Categories

Acceptance Essays
Alcohol & Drugs
American History
Anatomy & Physiology
Animal Science
Anthropology
Architecture
Arts
Astronomy
Aviation
Biographies
Biology
Book Reports
Business
Chemistry
Computers & Internet
Creative Writing
Current Events
Economics
Education
Engineering
English
Environmental Issues
Ethics
European History
Film & Cinema
Foreign Languages
Geography
Government
Health & Beauty
Health Care
History
Human Sexuality
Legal Issues
Marketing
Mathematics
Medicine
Movies
Music
Mythology
Philosophy
Physics
Poetry
Political Issues
Political Science
Psychology
Religion
Science
Shakespeare
Social Issues
Sociology
Speech & Communications
Sports & Games
Supernatural Issues
Technology
Theater
World History
Zoology




She Walks In Beauty

Statistics

  Counts

  Total Pages: 3.91
  Total Words: 977
  Total Characters: 4415
  Number of Sentences: 51


  Averages

  Words per Sentences: 19.16
  Characters per Words: 4.52


  Readability

  Flesch Reading Ease: 72.14
  Fog Scale Level: 10.32
  Flesch-Kincaid Grade Level: 7.96  

"She Walks in Beauty"

George Gordon Noel Byron's poem titled, "She Walks in Beauty," plainly put, is a love poem about a beautiful woman and all of her features.  The poem follows a basic iambic tetrameter with an unaccented syllable followed by an accented syllable that allows for a rhythm to be set by the reader and can be clearly seen when one looks at a line:
She walks / in beau / ty like / the night.
T.S. Eliot, an American poet criticizes Byron's work by stating the poem, "needs to be read very rapidly because if one slows down the poetry vanishes and the rhyme is forced" (Eliot 224).  With this rhythm the reader can, however, look deeper into the contents of Byron's poem and discover a battle of two forces.  The two forces involved in Byron's poem are the darkness and light- at work in the woman's beauty, and also the two areas of her beauty-the internal and the external.  The poem appears to be about a lover, but in fact was written about "Byron's cousin, Anne Wilmot, whom he met at a party in a mourning dress of spangled black" (Leung 312).  This fact, the black dress that was brightened with spangles, helps the reader to understand the origin of the poem.  Byron portrays this, the mixing of the darkness and the light, not by describing the dress or the woman's actions, but by describing her physical beauty as well as her interior strengths.  In the beginning of the poem, the reader is given the image of darkness:  "She walks in beauty, like the night," but then the line continues explaining that the night is cloudless and the stars are bright.  So immediately the poem brings together its two opposing forces that are at work, darkness and light.
     In lines three and four Byron emphasizes that the unique feature of the woman is her ability to contain opposites within her; "the nest of dark and bright/meet" in her.  The joining together of the darkness and the light can be seen in her "aspect," or appearance, but also in her "eyes."  In this case, "the...

Please login to view comments from other users.



If you are having problems registering, please don't hesitate to contact us.

© Copyright 1999-2009 Moopuna.com. All Rights Reserved.