Good Vs. Evil In Edgar Allen Poe's The Raven

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“Words have no power to impress the mind without the exquisite horror of their reality.” once said Edgar Allan Poe(“Brainyquote”).This thought explains that words have no true meaning unless you expose people’s reality. In the poem The Raven Poe creates a mood of sorrow and darkness. The poems plot is about the protagonist grieving about the loss of Lenore. The exposition begins with a man hearing a tapping on the window. Once he opens the window a raven flies in. The man starts asking the raven if God is sending him a message and if he is ever going to see Lenore again, but the raven responds with the same answer, “Nevermore.” Edgar Allen Poe’s “The Raven” strongly demonstrates the Dark Romanticism literary style. The narrative poem gives multiple …show more content…

In the fifteenth stanza he uses “devil” (line 85) to describe the raven. Earlier on the speaker asks the raven if God is sending him a message to forget Lenore. With the bird's usual response of “Nevermore”, the speaker gets angry and calls the bird the devil. Another example is, “ And his eyes have all the seeming of a demon’s…” (line 105).[E:Quote] “Demon” means an evil spirit, so the speaker sees the devil come out of the bird through its eyes.[D:Describe] Poe also use good vs evil in the fourteenth stanza like “angels” (line 81).[E:Quote] This says that the speaker sees angels and is wondering if God is sending him a message.[D:paraphrase]
Also, Poe uses gothic elements throughout his poem. In the sixteenth stanza he uses “angels”(line 95). The speaker is asking the raven if there is an angel in heaven named Lenore.[D:Describing] Poe also uses gothic elements in stanza fourteenth like “velvet violet lining”(line 76).[E:Quote] The speaker describes the rich colors the cushion has.[D:Paraphrase] Another example is, “Darkness there, and nothing more” (line 12).[E:Quote] When the speaker heard the tapping on the chamber door he was puzzled at what was making the

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