Wednesday, November 13, 2019
Reflection of Edgar Allan Poes Pessimistic Moods in The Raven :: Poe Raven Essays
      Reflection of Edgar Allan Poe's Pessimistic Moods in The Raven                 Throughout literature, an author's works  almost always reflect their     mood and character. Edgar Allan Poe was an American writer whose short  stories     and poems reflected his pessimistic moods. One of  Poe's poems, "The  Raven," is     about a raven that flies into the home of a sad and lonely man. This poem  best     expresses Poe's sense of despair and gloominess because the literary  elements     used in the poem are a constant reference to them.                 An example that portrays "The Raven" as a  reflection of Poe's despair     and gloominess is the poem's setting. The poem takes place in a haunted  house     during a violent storm. For example, in the poem it says, "On this home  by     horror haunted," and "..tempest tossed thee here ashore." The time and place  of     the poem deliver a feeling of negativity and pessimism to the reader. Poe's  use     of a depressing and negative setting for "The Raven" illustrates his despair  and     gloominess.                 Another example that illustrates the poem as  an expression of Poe's mood     is the raven itself. A raven is a large bird of the crow family with  lustrous     black feathers and a straight, sharp beak. Poe could have used any bird,  however     he wanted the reader to experience the gloom and despondency that he  experienced.     Therefore he wrote about a raven.                 Finally, Poe's use of assonance throughout the  poem also contributed to     the poem's illustration of despair and gloominess. Assonance is the  repetition     of vowel sound. For instance, at the end of each stanza it says, "Quoth  the     raven, Nevermore," "This is it and nothing more," or a phrase ending with  the     word more. The repetition of these sounds emphasize the words that contribute  to     the mood of the poem. Nevermore is a negative word meaning never again.  The     raven only said this word. Poe emphasizes nevermore because it helps  accentuate     the depressed and despaired mood of the poem.  					    
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