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Byron's Style

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Byron's Poetic Style

Unlike other romantic poets of the time, Byron freely expressed all of his emotions, dark and otherwise, and focused more on man and the nature of life rather than nature itself. Byron' style of poetry gained him a life in literature by his use of shocking frankness in expressing his emotions, enduring themes, and style of writing. More importantly, in making his name immortal, he made his ideas immortal. Written in ink, and translated into the mind of the reader, he preserved ideas and philosophies that are written with enough style and emotion, and possessed of enough merit and allure of their own to become foundation stones of humanity's psyche. Byron used a rather odd sort of writing in order to express his emotions. T.S. Eliot labeled some of his work antiquated -- Byron no doubt influenced by his indulgence in Shakespeare -- but all the same, some of his work possessed a unique style. For instance, there lie within his texts numerous examples of exclamatory remarks, shouting expressions of grief and fury. In one poem, "Remember thee!", there were six sentences, fully five of which ended in an exclamation points.
Remember thee! remember thee!
Till Lethe quench life's burning stream
Remorse and shame shall cling to thee,
And haunt thee like a feverish dream!
Remember thee! Aye, doubt it not.
Thy husband too shall think of thee:
By neither shalt thou be forgot,
Thou false to him, thou fiend to me! However, not only do individual poems have a high percentage of exclamatory punctuation, but nearly every single poem written by Byron possesses at least one, and often several exclamations.

Besides his ubiquitous use of exclamation points, he always couched his poems in some sort of rhyme or verse. Such a practice was not all that extraordinary, but out of that rhyme he was able to create a subtext

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