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Comparing Lord Byron's And Thou Art Dead, As Young And Fair

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The poem “And Thou art Dead, as Young and Fair” by Lord Byron is an incredible poem about undying love. This poem is a great example of romantic poetry due to its melancholic nature.The narrator of this poem has lost someone they deeply cared for, but despite her death his love for her remains strong and unwavered. The narrator goes on to talk about her beauty and how it was lost to the world. He also talks about the pain and suffering he has endured because of her death. In the poem the narrator talks of an undying love for someone who has passed away. The quotation, “I will not ask where thou liest low, / Nor gaze upon the spot; / There flowers or weeds at will may grow, / So I behold them not: / It is enough for me to prove / That what I lov'd, and long must love, ” (Byron 10-15) shows how the narrator states that he does not need to see where his beloved is buried to know he still loves her. This continues the poem's central theme of eternal love. The narrator expresses to his audience that his ignorance to where his love is buried only servers as a reminder of what he must continusly love. …show more content…

The narrator states, “Yet did I love thee to the last / As fervently as thou, / Who didst not change through all the past, / And canst not alter now...” (20-23) These stanzas help the reader understand how deeply the narrator loved this women. He is telling the reader that he loved her till the end of her days and will continue to love her. The narrator states, “The love where Death has set his seal, / Nor age can chill, nor rival steal, / Nor falsehood disavow…” (24-26) This meaning that death has forever sealed the narrator's love for this women and nothing can ever take that away, not when the narrator grows old nor another person can take his love away from

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