Literary notes about Somnolence (AI summary)
Writers often deploy the term somnolence to evoke not only physical drowsiness but also a pervasive sense of lethargy that can mirror social, emotional, or even existential decay. It is used to describe characters succumbing to a gloomy state or an almost meditative stupor, as when an individual drops into a torpid haze after an encounter with distressing events [1, 2]. At times somnolence functions as a metaphor, symbolizing the idle inertia of a community or the waning vigour of a society, much like the quiet, encroaching calm of a fading day or a cultural lull [3, 4]. In this way, the word enriches narratives by casting moments of pause as both literal and figurative gateways to deeper reflections on life’s transient nature [5, 6].