"Bell" is a poem written by Edgar Allan Poe and communicates a cheerful tone through various voices and repeated words. A profound onomatopoeia, "Qingsheng" advanced after each festival. First of all, the rhyme, the sound in the poem, the onomatopoeia creates a happy tone; but at the end of the poem, the acoustic equipment helps to make a darker tune. In each section, the bell is made of different metal materials. In the first quarter, the bell is explained as silver. In this case, the bell is pleasant, precious and sturdy.
This poem can be explained in various ways, but the most basic thing is the reflection of the sound that the bell can make, and the emotion evoked from that voice. For example, "Bells ring from a bell" is reminiscent of countless church bells. There is a slightly deep explanation. One thing is that this poem is a painful life performance from youth's agility to age. As enthusiasm for poetry increases, people become increasingly hopeless. The other is the past of the season from spring to winter. Seasonal past is often used as a metaphor of life itself. Poetry also hints at Poe's theme, mourns his lost wife, courts to sled, marries, and kills in the fire while her husband is watching. The charge of the iron bell reflects the husband's last madness hit by sorrow.
The romantic "bell ringing bell" comes from Edgar Allenpo's "Bell". This had a major impact on literature in the early 19th century. In the early 1800s, writers Po, Irving, and Cooper showed the characteristics of romantic writers. Cooper expresses their feelings sincerely. This charm to emotion, not intelligent, is a characteristic of romanticism. - Romanticism We often associate this word with love when we think of romance or romance. People talk about what they want to make them "more romantic" to their important people. But what exactly does the word "romantic" mean? This is a luxurious gift brought back home, or a beautiful poem, overnight spent alone under the light of a flower, a candle. In today's society, these things may mean.
In these opening lines, Poe introduced the first of four bells, silver sled bells. These sled bells are accompanied by a pleasant mood. The bell as an explanation of "silver" provides a visual image and is also associated with values. m in "what" and "world" and m repeated in "joy" and "melody" will join the fun sound of these first lines. The use of the word "tingle" is the first appearance of onomatopoeia, or a word that sounds like that. In this case, it reproduces the bells of these light sleds