Away, Away, Ye Notes of Woe!
Away, Away, Ye Notes of Woe! - meaning Summary
Grief for Lost Love
Byron’s lyric is a personal lament for a lost beloved, Thyrza, who functions as an idealized, possibly fictional woman. The speaker pleads for consoling music to cease because it recalls happier times and now only deepens sorrow. Memories intrude as haunting echoes and vanished dreams, transforming former harmony into painful discord. The poem frames love’s absence as bereavement: Thyrza is "beloved dust," a vanished light whose loss makes life bleak and lonely.
Read Complete AnalysesAway, away, ye notes of woe! Be silent, thou once soothing strain, Or I must flee from hence–for, oh! I dare not trust those sounds again. To me they speak of brighter days But lull the chords, for now, alas! I must not think, I may not gaze, On what I am–on what I was. The voice that made those sounds more sweet Is hush’d, and all their charms are fled And now their softest notes repeat A dirge, an anthem o’er the dead! Yes, Thyrza! yes, they breathe of thee, Beloved dust! since dust thou art; And all that once was harmony Is worse than discord to my heart! ‘Tis silent all!–but on my ear The well remember’d echoes thrill; I hear a voice I would not hear, A voice that now might well be still: Yet oft my doubting soul ’twill shake; Even slumber owns its gentle tone, Till consciousness will vainly wake To listen, though the dream be flown. Sweet Thyrza! waking as in sleep, Thou art but now a lovely dream; A star that trembled o’er the deep, Then turn’d from earth its tender beam. But he who through life’s dreary way Must pass, when heaven is veil’d in wrath, Will long lament the vanish’d ray That scatter’d gladness o’er his path.
December 6, 1811.
Feel free to be first to leave comment.