Edgar Allen Poe's The Raven And The Cask Of Amontillado

1765 Words4 Pages

If a person has received a present from his family member or his closest friend, he will ask himself what is inside that box. Is it something that he will enjoy, and it will make him exultant, or will he not feel the connection and the need for that gift? Reading a poem is comparative to a bestowal, some people will feel the deep affiliation of the author and they can relate to the author’s description of life and the other people on the other hand will feel disconnected to the author’s poem. When I read a couple of Edgar Allen Poe poems, I feel the disaffiliation to his poem, afterward I read about his life history, and then I feel the connection between his real life and his way of writing. Edgar Allen Poe had very complex life. His life …show more content…

Later doing that time a family adopted Edgar and educated him, during that time so he developed an interest in literature and poetry. Next Edgar transferred from state to state from job to the other, then Married one of his cousin, the lady was in very young age, there was dragged between his and her age she dies at a young age. During Edgar’s life he writes many poem, some of his most popular one were The Raven and The Cask of Amontillado. First, in one of the many the poem’s Edgar Allen Poe have writing a poem call The Raven; the Raven had explored some of Edgar common themes—death and loss. An unknown narrator laments the demise of his great love Lenore. The poem summary is it’s late at night, and late in the year (after midnight on a December evening, to be precise). A man is sitting in his room, half reading, half falling asleep, and trying to forget his lost love, Lenore. Suddenly, he hears someone knocking at the door. He calls out, express regret to the "visitor" he …show more content…

The Raven settles in on a statue above the door, and for some reason, our speaker 's first ask for his name, the Raven replies, with a single word: "Nevermore." Understandably surprised, the man asks more questions. The bird 's vocabulary was pretty limited, though; all it says is "Nevermore." Our narrator catches on to this rather slowly and asks more and more question. The poor speaker starts to lose his sanity. In the poem in line 1-6 the man is very drowsy and he when to slumber, then he thought he heard a knock on his door, He tries to calm himself down, telling himself that "tis some visitor. He opens the door, but there was nothing there. In line 7-12 it tells you it was in December, the fire chamber is getting low, Poe makes the reader feel creepy. He 's grieving for a lost woman. Someone named Lenore. This woman (His wife? His girlfriend?) Is among the angels and has left him behind, alone. He hopes for an end to the discomfort, what he calls "surcease from sorrow”. In line 13-18 it seems like the room and its creepy atmosphere might really be getting to our speaker. His heart starts to beat quicker, to calm himself down, he has to tell himself that the knocking sound he heard was just a

Open Document