How Does Poe Use Figurative Language In The Raven

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In “The Raven”, Poe uses figurative language to help describe different things throughout the poem. Three of the these Literary devices are simile, allusion, and metaphor. Poe uses these types of figurative language to create deeper feelings and meaning throughout the poem. It also allows Poe to create drama within the poem that grabs you as the reader. “The Raven” by Edgar Allen Poe is a poem that talks about death. Just recently the love of his life, Lenore, has passed away. There is a raven who only says, “nevermore”, which means the word has gone from an odd name of the Raven to a prophetic warning that he will never see Lenore again nor will he ever see the bird again first, I simile gives a better picture of an object or person that is being described. A simile compares one thing with another. As in “The Raven” Poe uses several different similes. The first simile when he writes, “And his eyes have all the seeming of a demon’s that is dreaming” helps the reader see the evilness of the bird. Another simile used in this poem is “Suddenly there came a tapping, As if someone gently rapping” This is a simile that uses “as to compare tapping and gentle rapping to help the reader have a better understanding of what the narrator is trying to say. …show more content…

Which is important in showing the readers a more interesting, yet more easily understood description of something or a comparison of something. In the quote “ To the fowl whose fiery eyes now burned into my bosom’s core” the narrator is trying to provide a picture along with all the feeling that come with it. Another metaphor in “The Raven” would be “All my soul within me burning”. Which states his soul is grieving in the thought of Lenore being

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