The Raven creates a sense of doom for the speaker by confirming the fact that he will never be able to get rid of his sorrow. He will always be sad as he longs for his lost love, Lenore. In the poem, there’s a part where the Speaker is irate and driven to madness by the Raven. He screams at the Raven, “Leave my loneliness unbroken! – quit thy bust above my door! / Take thy beak from out my heart and take thy form from off my door” (Poe 17). The Raven gives the Speaker despair. The Speaker tells the bird to take its beak out of his heart because the bird is deepening his pain and causing agony. It also shows how the Raven is real because the speaker sees it above his door. The bird does not literally have his beak in the Speaker’s heart but he is lying above his door, haunting the Speaker. Although the bird has no intent to cause the Speaker pain, the Speaker interprets the Raven saying “nevermore” as a way of saying his pain will never end, thus creating his own sense of
The Raven creates a sense of doom for the speaker by confirming the fact that he will never be able to get rid of his sorrow. He will always be sad as he longs for his lost love, Lenore. In the poem, there’s a part where the Speaker is irate and driven to madness by the Raven. He screams at the Raven, “Leave my loneliness unbroken! – quit thy bust above my door! / Take thy beak from out my heart and take thy form from off my door” (Poe 17). The Raven gives the Speaker despair. The Speaker tells the bird to take its beak out of his heart because the bird is deepening his pain and causing agony. It also shows how the Raven is real because the speaker sees it above his door. The bird does not literally have his beak in the Speaker’s heart but he is lying above his door, haunting the Speaker. Although the bird has no intent to cause the Speaker pain, the Speaker interprets the Raven saying “nevermore” as a way of saying his pain will never end, thus creating his own sense of