Analysis Of The Raven, Lenore And God In The Raven By Edgar Allen Poe

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Edgar Allen Poe describes The Raven, Lenore, and God in “The Raven” Edgar Allen Poe wrote “The Raven” about the narrator is because he misses a woman named Lenore. It also talks about why the raven is so important in the poem. It talks about what the raven stands for and what everything it does mean. It also talks about how the narrator thought that God had sent the raven. The narrator thought that God had sent Lenore as well. It tells about how the narrator thinks that God had sent the raven to replace Lenore because the narrator was dwelling all the time about the loss of the woman named Lenore. This paper lastly talks about how the narrator works so hard to show the reader how God had sent him a replacement for the woman that he had lost. …show more content…

The narrator wants people to realize that even though he is lonely in some situations that there is also some beauty to it (Eddings). He wants the people who read his Poetry to understand and pinpoint the beauty of his Poetry (Poe, “Philosophy”). He tries to make some of the Poetry dark and gloomy so it easier to see and pinpoint the beauty of his Poems (Poe, “Philosophy”). The narrator takes his time at his Poetry (Poe, “Philosophy”). He wants all his work to be the absolute best it can possibly be (Poe, “Philosophy”). He wants his work to be as close to perfection as it can be (Poe, …show more content…

The bird did not maneuver a muscle but perched in his house above the door (Poe, “Raven”). All the bird did was sit there and nothing more (Poe, “Raven”). The raven always perched on top of the chamber doors (Poe, “Raven”). “Perched upon a bust of Pallas just above my chamber door,” said the narrator. It never motioned a muscle from on top of those doors (Poe, “Raven”). It just perched upon them same doors and just kept saying the word nevermore (Poe, “Raven”). The raven kept saying nevermore as if it had something it was trying to let the narrator know (Poe, “Raven”). The bird only said the word nevermore like it had a special meaning to him (Poe, “Raven”). As the narrator wished the bird to leave, the bird still said “Nevermore” (Poe, “Raven”). The raven always tried to exasperate the narrator (Poe, “Raven”). The narrator was always trying to figure out why the bird just perched on top of the chamber doors and only said the same thing repeatedly (Poe, “Raven”). The bird never moved from them doors (Poe, “Raven”). The raven never said anything more than the word nevermore (Poe, “Raven”). The raven made the story feel somber (Poe, “Raven”). The bird always had a gloomy and somber feeling to it when it was mentioned in the story (Poe,

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