Rhyme, Tone, And Imagery In The Raven By Edgar Allan Poe

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Edgar Allan Poe is a very talented writer. He creates poems that no one has ever seen before. The way he switches up words is fascinating. He switched the way people looked at literature back them and even to this day. The poem “The Raven” was one of his most popular poems that he was ever written. In that poem he uses Internal Rhyme, tone, and imagery. Edgar Allan Poe keeps a internal rhyme throughout his poem that makes the poem continue really smoothly. He uses the internal rhyme of ABCBBBB by rhyming words like “stronger...longer,” And has a rhyme in every sentence. “[N]apping...rapping,” is used in line C and has no other words that rhyme but fits so well into the stanza. In one stanza he uses the rhyming technique of B five times, it just shows how he can go from rhyming one word to five lines. “[D]oor/door,” he uses a repetition rhyming. He uses the same word twice in two different lines. When Poe does this it tells the audience that he wants to emphasize that frase and that it was important in the story. …show more content…

He sets the tone from the beginning of the story, and brings chills down our spine. “Once upon a midnight dreary.” Poe uses midnight to create some type of fear and loneliness with a pitch black night. “[F]illed me with fantastic terrors never felt before.” When he expresses fear in his poem, it makes the audience reading afraid as well. A great poem is when you can image every single detail that the writer gives. Edgar
Allan Poe is marvelous at using imagery. “[W]hose fiery eyes now burned into my bosom’s core.” Poe gives a great visual, on how the raven does not take his eyes off of him and the way he is feeling in that moment. Poe gives imagery in the way that you can also feel what is happening. “Take thy beak from out my heart,” he expresses his pain with a sharp object stabbing into the only organ that makes you live. He makes us visualize what is going to be continued in the

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