Conqueror worm and the end of the world Edgar Allan Poe is an ancestor of fear and mystery. His twists, terrible stories, and poetry are full of details, often ended with an irritating twist. The Conqueror worm is an example of his wonderful rhythm and tells us how drama will become a reality in human life. That scene is a theater, but it is not a place of drama. Poe explains it as a way to deceive readers, but the theater is actually a human background. Since we are living our lives at this stage, everyone can see them. Lines 3 to 6 explain the crowd and how they view "hope and fear filled games". If a person looks like this
Many of the "conquist worms" try to tell us the deeper meaning of this poem by using some rhetoric techniques. The second section tells us that "huge invisible things" spread the problem by "an unseen tragedy spreading out of their eagle feathers!" Poe said that huge unseen things will expand their troubles with the huge spread of vultures' feathers. The most important speech must be the stage act. Then, like a funeral, we finish mankind violently and present the conquist worm as a winner. "Raging storm" means how quickly the curtain ends a play and covers "all forms of tremors" to show that human beings were actually completed.
Edgar Allen Poe wants us to know that we believe the world will end with this poem. He explained the end as a disgusting grotesque worm that swallowed us all, but in reality the play shows human trouble and how it ends our lives. The play expresses condolences in the last section, the pale angels described as tragedy, and they call them "men".
It may not look like an ordinary person, but there is a headend and a tail end. This immediately denied the belief that both ends become new worms in early childhood. Because when the worm is divided into two halves, the end of the worm always dies. Small pieces of worms can be cut and re-grown, especially at the end. Cells of sputum can be rearranged to keep insects a little smaller, and insect tissues can adapt to new functions in the body. Still, the part cut from the worm can not become a completely independent worm without a heart.