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FREE ESSAY ON EDGAR ALLAN POE LITERARY ANALYSIS

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EDGAR ALLAN POE LITERARY ANALYSIS

Literary Analysis of The Raven
by
Paul Heimel 
The life of Edgar Allan Poe was as morbid and melancholy as his works. After 
the abandonment by his father and the disturbing death of his mother, both prominent 
traveling actors, Edgar was reluctantly forced into orphanage. He was later taken into
the 
home of John Allan, a wealthy tobacco merchant. Their relationship was shaky, at best, 
and the contention between the two would last until Allan's death, where his will left 
nothing for Poe. Amidst these calamities, came only more distress. The death John 
Allan's wife, the woman who cared for Poe after his mother died, and a large amount of 
debts acquired from gambling that forced him into early resignation from the University 
of Virginia, only sent Edgar into a deeper state of despair. But the most devastating
blow 
came when his beloved wife, Virginnia Clemm, died from the same disease his mother 
perished from--consumption. The tragedies in Poe's life are reflected in his poem, "The 
Raven," and can be predominately seen through the comparison between the loss of his 
wife, and the narrators loss of Lenore.
The apparent tone in Edgar Allan Poe's "The Raven" seemingly represents a very 
painful condition of mind, an intellect sensitive to madness and the abyss of melancholy

brought upon by the death of a beloved lady. The parallelism of Poe's own personal 
problems with those of the narrator in "The Raven," and the repetitive verse by the
raven, 
makes the reader aware of Poe's prominent tone of melancholy. A strong device for the 
melancholic tone is Poe's life experiences. The narrator's sorrow for the lost Lenore is

paralleled with Poe's own grief regarding the death of his wife. Confined in the chamber

are memories of her who had frequented it. These ghostly recollections bring out a state

of eager anticipation in the reader to know and be relieved of the bewilderment that the

narrator and consequently Poe himself are experiencing; the narrator ponders whether he 
will see his wife in the afterlife.
After Virginnia's lingering death, Poe tried to relieve his grief by drinking. A 
parallelism is formed in "The Raven" between the condescending actions of the raven 
towards the narrator and the taunting of alcohol towards Poe. The raven condescends that

Poe will never see his lost love again when uttering, "forget this lost Lenore," in line
84. 
Alcohol taunts Poe into ceaseless depression and caused him to have a life-long problem 
with alcoholism, which eventually led to his death. In a similar manner to which alcohol

explored Poe's inner devastation, the raven brings out the narrator's innermost fears
that 
he will never see his Lenore again. 
The articulation of language through the use of the raven and it's refrain is also 
utilized to produce the melancholic tone in "The Raven." In the poem it is important that

the answers to the questions are already known, to illustrate the self-torture to which
the 
narrator endures. Repetition of "Nevermore" baffles the narrator into a victimized state

of mind. Articulation of "Nevermore" also emphasizes the features of the word itself, 
specifically its meaning. Through focusing on the raven and its raspy "Nevermore," an 
effect is developed that highlights a gloomy and depressed state of mind. A refrain is 
used throughout Edgar Allan Poe's "The Raven," to impress upon the developing tone of 
melancholy. The refrain accomplishes this emphasis through its creation of an awareness 
of the inevitable; realizing that the raven's response to any question will be
"Nevermore," 
the character asks about his lost love, the "rare and radiant maiden whom the angels name

Lenore" (line 96), perhaps on purpose to experience further torture and anguish.
Through "The Raven," Poe makes his personal hell become strangely 
mesmerizing and enjoyable for everyone. Poe's haunting descriptions, unnerving 
parallelism between his life and the poem, and alarming continuation of a melancholic 
tone, draws the reader into spheres of insanity which at once explores the soul and
pleases 
the reader.

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