Answer:
The second line or stanza in the poem by Lord Byron compares light and dark to narrate the women's beauty.
Step-by-step explanation:
The poem is described an unnamed woman. she's really quite obvious, and the speaker differentiate her to many of beautiful, but dark, things, like "starry skies and nights''
The second line continues to use the comparisons between dark and light, day and night, to narrate her beauty.
We also understand that her face is really "sweet" and "pure."
The third lines wraps concludes everything saying she's not only beautiful, but she's "innocent " and "good," to boot.