The Bells And Road Not Taken

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Poetry Paper
In the poem, “The Bells,” by Edgar Allen Poe, the speaker is explaining the fact of how every time the bells are ringing, an important event is happening in his life, whether it is good or bad. The speaker is feeling joyful and happiness in the beginning. However, as the poem keeps going, the speaker introduces the tragedies and the disparity that he feels in the loss of everything he loves in a short amount of time. In the poem, “Fire and Ice,” written by Robert Frost, he explains his belief of how the world will end in fire; due to the desires of the people living in the world. On the other hand, Frost also introduces the idea that the world could also be destroyed by ice; because of the cold heartedness of people and the lack of affection they possess. Robert Frost also wrote the poem, “Road …show more content…

Frost also explains the idea of that once you make a decision, there is no going back to another decision without it being untainted. In, “The Bells,” the speaker has gone down a path that has caused his life to end in nothing but pain and suffering because of the death of his beloved wife. If the speaker could turn back the clock, he would go back and make a different decision to not love at all. The speaker has felt nothing but sorrow because he has no woman to love anymore because his one love perished in a fire. The speaker would choose to not love at all because he would not want to feel the torture he went through when his wife was screaming a loud screech and he could do nothing to help her. In the poem, “The Bells,” it states, “How they clang, and clash and roar!/ What a horror they outpour/ On the bosom of the palpitating air!/ Yet the ear, it fully knows.” (Poe, stanza 3) This quote is saying that the town knows the fire is not going burn out and someone is going to

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