---
title: "Passage of Time — AP Lit Definition & Symbol Guide"
description: "The passage of time is the irreversible flow from past to future. In AP Lit, it shows up as symbols like rivers and seasons that anchor poetry analysis essays."
canonical: "https://fiveable.me/ap-lit/key-terms/passage-of-time"
type: "key-term"
subject: "AP English Literature"
unit: "Unit 8"
---

# Passage of Time — AP Lit Definition & Symbol Guide

## Definition

In AP Lit, the passage of time is the irreversible movement of moments from past to future, a concept writers rarely name directly. Instead they encode it in symbols (rivers, seasons, ruins), conceits, and allusions, which is exactly the skill Topic 8.4 asks you to decode.

## What It Is

The passage of time is the continuous, one-way flow of moments from past to present to future. You can't pause it, rewind it, or bargain with it, and that's precisely why writers obsess over it. Mortality, aging, lost love, fading empires, and seize-the-day urgency all grow out of this single idea.

Here's the [AP Lit](/ap-lit "fv-autolink") angle. Time is abstract, so poets almost never just say "time passes." They translate it into something concrete: a river that never stops flowing, seasons turning, a sunset, a crumbling statue in the desert. That move (abstract idea rendered as a physical [image](/ap-lit/unit-5/personification-allusion-poetry/study-guide/iI99D3ygrqaTLHx4UgKy "fv-autolink")) is the heart of Topic 8.4, identifying symbols, conceits, and allusions. When you spot a river, a clock, or autumn leaves in a poem, your first question should be whether the poet is really talking about time.

## Why It Matters

This term lives in **Topic 8.4: Identifying symbols, conceits, and allusions** in [Unit 8](/ap-lit/unit-8 "fv-autolink"). The skill the CED is building there is recognizing when a concrete image stands in for an abstract idea, and the passage of time is one of the most common abstract ideas hiding behind symbols in the poems AP Lit loves to test. Rivers, journeys, seasons, day-night cycles, and ruins all show up on multiple-choice passages and in poetry analysis prompts as time symbols. If you can name the symbol AND say what it suggests about time (urgency, inevitability, decay, renewal), you're doing exactly what the poetry analysis FRQ rewards. It's also a [theme](/ap-lit/key-terms/theme "fv-autolink") thread you can pull through almost any work for the Q3 literary argument essay, since nearly every novel and play on the typical AP list deals with characters confronting time they can't get back.

## Connections

### Symbols, Conceits, and Allusions (Topic 8.4, Unit 8)

This is the home topic. The passage of time is the abstract idea; the [symbol](/ap-lit/unit-6/character-motives/study-guide/MJlkjiitYpoN1A1RABCr "fv-autolink") is its physical costume. A river works as a time symbol because both flow in one direction and never stop, which is why practice questions keep pairing rivers and journeys with time.

### "Ozymandias" (Unit 8)

Shelley's shattered statue is the classic time-as-destroyer symbol. The "king of kings" boasted of permanence, and time reduced him to broken stone in empty sand. If a prompt asks how an image conveys time's power, this poem is your mental template.

### "Do Not Go Gentle into That Good Night" (Unit 8)

Thomas treats the day-to-night cycle as a conceit for a human lifespan, with "that good night" standing for death. It shows the flip side of time symbolism. Instead of accepting time's flow, the [speaker](/ap-lit/key-terms/speaker "fv-autolink") rages against it.

### Chronology (Units 1, 3, 6)

Chronology is the structural cousin of this theme. In prose units, you analyze how a narrative orders events (flashbacks, [in medias res](/ap-lit/key-terms/in-medias-res "fv-autolink"), time jumps). Passage of time is what a text is about; chronology is how a text arranges time on the page.

## On the AP Exam

No released FRQ uses the phrase "passage of time" verbatim, but the concept sits underneath a huge share of poetry analysis (Q1) prompts, which routinely ask how a poet uses literary elements to convey a speaker's complex attitude toward aging, loss, or mortality. On multiple choice, expect symbol-identification stems like the ones in Fiveable practice sets: what does the river represent, what does a journey often symbolize, what does the skylark stand for. The trap is stopping at identification. "The river symbolizes time" earns you nothing by itself. You have to push to interpretation, like "the river's relentless current mirrors the speaker's panic that time is carrying his beloved's youth away," which is the move that turns a symbol-spot into evidence supporting a defensible thesis.

## Passage of Time vs Chronology

Passage of time is a thematic concept, the idea that time flows forward and can't be reclaimed, usually delivered through symbols like rivers and seasons. Chronology is a structural choice, the order in which a narrative presents events. A novel can scramble its chronology with flashbacks while still being thematically about the passage of time. On the exam, theme questions want the first; structure questions want the second.

## Key Takeaways

- The passage of time is the irreversible flow of moments from past to future, and poets express it through concrete symbols rather than stating it directly.
- Common time symbols on AP Lit passages include rivers, journeys, seasons, sunsets, clocks, and ruins, each carrying a slightly different attitude toward time.
- This concept anchors Topic 8.4 because identifying a symbol means connecting a physical image to an abstract idea, and time is one of the most frequently symbolized abstractions.
- Naming the symbol is only half the job; high-scoring analysis explains what the symbol suggests about the speaker's attitude toward time, like urgency, dread, or acceptance.
- "Ozymandias" shows time as a destroyer of human pride, while "Do Not Go Gentle into That Good Night" shows a speaker resisting time's pull toward death, giving you two ready-made contrast examples.
- Don't confuse the passage of time (a theme) with chronology (the structural order of events in a narrative).

## FAQs

### What does the passage of time mean in AP Lit?

It's the continuous, irreversible movement of moments from past to future. In AP Lit it matters as a theme that writers convey through symbols, conceits, and allusions, the skill set covered in [Topic 8.4](/ap-lit/unit-8/symbols-conceits-allusions-poetry/study-guide/P0sAR0jN6h6pPkHB5seo "fv-autolink").

### Why do rivers symbolize the passage of time in poetry?

Rivers flow constantly in one direction and never return to their source, just like time. That's why practice questions about poems like "To His Coy Mistress" and Conrad's Heart of Darkness keep linking rivers to time and to a character's journey through life.

### Is the passage of time the same thing as chronology?

No. The passage of time is a theme, the idea that time moves forward and can't be recovered. Chronology is the structural order in which a narrative presents its events. A story told out of order can still be deeply about time slipping away.

### Do I need to memorize specific poems about time for the AP Lit exam?

Not for the poetry analysis FRQ, since the poem is printed in the prompt. But knowing time-themed works like "Ozymandias" or "Do Not Go Gentle into That Good Night" gives you strong evidence options for the Q3 literary argument essay and helps you recognize time symbols faster on multiple choice.

### What are the most common symbols of the passage of time in literature?

Rivers, journeys, the four seasons, sunrise and sunset, clocks and hourglasses, and ruins or decay. Each carries a different tone: seasons suggest cycles and renewal, while ruins (like the statue in "Ozymandias") suggest time's power to erase even the mightiest.

## Related Study Guides

- [8.4 Identifying symbols, conceits, and allusions](/ap-lit/unit-8/symbols-conceits-allusions-poetry/study-guide/P0sAR0jN6h6pPkHB5seo)

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