A.S.Pushkin "Outlived the Daylight" wrote in 1820, when he went to his southern exile. The journey by ship from Feodosia to Gurzuf inspired memories of the irrevocably past time. Cheerless reflections contributed to the environment, because the poem was written at night. The ship quickly moved around the sea, which covered the impenetrable fog, not allowing to view the approaching shore.
Pushkin's poem "The daylight has gone out" conditionallyis divided into three parts, separates them from each other by a refrain. First, a picture of the nocturnal sea appears before the reader, to which the fog has fallen. This is an introduction to the main part of the philosophical work. In the second part, Alexander Sergeyevich gives reminiscences of the days gone by, about what brought him suffering, about his former love, about his hopes and desires, and his tormenting deceit. In the third part of the poem, the poet describes his homeland, recalls that it was there that his youth blossomed, friends remained in this country.
Pushkin's poem "The daylight has gone out"symbolizes the transition from youth to maturity, and the poet does not see anything wrong in it, because wisdom comes with age, and a person begins to understand more, to objectively evaluate the events taking place. The lyrical hero remembers the past with warmth, but he treats the future quite calmly. The poet surrenders to the mercy of the natural course of things, he understands that man can not stop the time, which in the poem symbolizes the ocean and the windy.