Theme Of Insanity In The Raven By Edgar Allen Poe

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Reality or Fantasy?

Insanity and love seem parallel when it comes to Edgar Allen Poe and his various works. What seems to hold him together to his reality is the insanity of his poetry, but to which his poetry is the expression of his insanity. Simply looking into Poe’s history, his life was full of various tragedies: death of his mother at the age of three, being adopted by another family, and marrying his cousin, Poe has some issues to work out. Reviewing his poem The Raven, finding any clear intentions would seem daunting, but nonetheless it is an effort still worth trying. Before diving directly into Poe’s works, we must first begin with understanding a …show more content…

The raven’s response with “nevermore” is the Raven offering certainty to the narrator. The raven embodies the hopes of the narrator’s chance at feeling loved and cared for, and the Raven is seen as the free and unbound bird to which it comes and goes at the dawn of a new light (most likely referring to the beginning of a new relationship with another human being). Edgar Allen Poe’s catharsis to love seems to be an allusion to his very life. Lenore is merely a proxy-name for love, while the other disturbances are the various doubts he feels. The sounds of the rapping at the door are merely there to distract him from his thoughts of Lenore, almost as a reminder that to think of her would only doom her to the fate of his previous loved ones, while the Raven is the sign of hope that beckons him to continue in his fantasy with the assurance the distractions are merely environmental and nothing

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