This paper is about poet about crow. In this article it explains how lonely a narrator is because he misses a woman named Lenoir. It also discusses why the crow is so important in this verse. It talks about what the crow represents and what it represents. It also discusses how narrator thinks that God sent a crow. The narrator believes that God also sent Lenoir. Because the narrator is to lose a woman named Lenoir, it tells you how the narrator thinks that God sent a crow to replace Lenoir.
Edgar Allan Poe's "Crow" uses crows itself as a symbol of torture, mainly due to his lost love, self torture of the Lenoir narrator. That crow may be a fictional imagination fiction, and apparently may feel sad about Lenoir's death. The narrator stated in the first quarter that he was weak (731). When he heard rap at the door, he was almost taking a nap that would allow him to hear the sound ... Poe exploring the despair associated with losing love Poe, rhyme, By subtly using the selection of gauges, images, symbols, and words, we lead us to the world of despicable images, pathological preferences, and supernatural conspiracy. As Poe could create, we soon got overwhelmed by the pulse drive of supernatural fear. Every time I can not forget it
Like many poems such as "Ulalume" and "Annabel Lee", "crow" refers to the memory of the painful hero of a lady who died. Through poetry, Lenoir's premature death is tacitly aesthetic and the talkie can not escape reliance on his own memory. As he asked if the crow had "a plaster of Gileades", was it a spiritual relief or did Reno really existed in the world after death? The fear of death and oblivion tells the majority of Poe's writings, and "The Raven" is one of his darkest publications as it provides such a clear negative answer. By contrast, when Poe used the name Lenoa in a similar situation in the poem "Lenoir", the main character Guy de Beaa cries in mourning as he believed that he would meet Lenoir in Heaven I concluded that it was not necessary.