How Is Guilt Reflected In The Raven

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As Guilt Festered in His Heart, it Pecked Away at His Sanity Guilt is often one of the first emotions felt after the loss of someone close. In “The Raven” the speaker feels grief after the loss of his maiden Lenore but the feeling of grief dominates his emotions. These feelings overwhelmed him until it drove him to a mental breakdown. The Raven is a representation of the guilt the speaker feels which is proven when the sensory evidence becomes apparent and the mental paralysis inhibits him. It’s only minutes after the Raven appears that such powerful emotions and memories take over the speaker. Hence you will see the transformation of a once young, virile man to a mere empty shell. A time in the poem it is clear the raven symbolizes the speaker's guilt for the loss of his maiden Lenore is in stanza sixteen and seventeen. The speaker asks the raven if Lenore is in heaven and the raven answers him saying no, she is in hell. The speaker feels it is his fault she is in hell because they had sex despite them not being married. The speaker begins screaming declaring the raven is lying to him and that his maiden is indeed in heaven. This is simply just the speakers attempt to deal …show more content…

The speaker has been trying so hard not to think about Lenore that it causes him to think about her even more. He wants all the memories to stop coming back to him because he believes if he stops thinking about her then he will stop thinking about the guilt he feels. This is why the memories are so strong, including the smell of her perfume, when the raven comes. The speaker is not actually yelling at a raven, but his own mind because the more he thinks about Lenore the worse it makes him feel. All he wants is to be able to forget about Lenore and the guilt he feels when he thinks of her, but the raven is what is keeping him from doing

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