Analysis and Symbolism in the Poem "The Raven" by Edgar Allan Poe

ANALYSIS AND SYMBOLISM IN
THE POEM “ THE RAVEN ”
A.J. SALEEMA  KATHOON
ASSISTANT  PROFESSOR  OF  ENGLISH
HAJEE  KARUTHA  ROWTHER HOWDIA
COLLEGE,UTHAMAPALAYAM.
   ABOUT THE POEM :
"
The Raven
" is a 
 by 
 
. First published in January
1845, the poem is often noted for its musicality,
stylized language, and 
 atmosphere.
It  tells of a 
 
's mysterious visit to a
distraught  lover, tracing the man's slow descent
into madness. The lover, often identified as a
student,
 is lamenting the loss of his love,
Lenore. Sitting on a bust of 
, the raven
seems to further distress the protagonist with its
constant repetition of the word "Nevermore".
Pallas[1][2]raventalkingsupernaturalEdgar Allan PoewriterAmericannarrative poem
   CONTINUES....
      The poem makes use of 
folk
, mythological,
religious, and 
classical
 references. "The Raven"
was first attributed to Poe in print in the 
New
York Evening Mirror
 on January 29, 1845. Its
publication made Poe popular in his lifetime,
although it did not bring him much financial
success. The poem was soon reprinted, 
parodied
,
and illustrated. Critical opinion is divided as to
the poem's literary status, but it nevertheless
remains one of the most famous poems  ever
written.
[4]
  THEMES :
THE ISOLATING POWER OF  GRIEF :
      The poem explores how grief can overcome a person’s
ability to live in the present and engage with society.
Over the course of the poem, the speaker’s inability to
forget his lost love Lenore drives him to despair and
madness. At the beginning, the speaker describes
himself as “weak and weary,” suggesting that his
attempts to distract himself from Lenore’s memory by
reading have only exhausted him. Although he is
initially amused by the raven, the raven’s word
“nevermore” soon reminds the speaker of how he
won’t ever see Lenore again.
  CONTINUES ...
The power of this revelation moves him so deeply that
he believes the air has grown “denser,” making it more
difficult to breathe and emphasizing that Lenore’s
presence in his memory completely changes his
perception of reality. Though the speaker tries to
convince himself that he should forget his grief, the
raven’s refrain takes him back to the reality of his loss,
again taking him out of the present moment. When he
tells the raven to leave his loneliness “unbroken,” he’s
emphasizing that his grief has caused him to shut
himself off from the world, but, paradoxically, he’s not
truly alone because the memory of Lenore keeps him
company.
 PSYCHOLOGICAL TERROR :
 Despite the poem’s eerie atmosphere, everything that
happens could actually have a rational explanation.
The speaker begins the poem in an unsettled state,
trying to distract himself from his grief, and the “quaint
and curious volume” he reads could certainly put him
in a dark and suggestible state of mind that the dreary
December night only enhances. Ravens can imitate
human speech, and a raven could theoretically make a
noise similar to the word “nevermore.” However, the
events of the poem are undeniably ghostly, and the
bird’s refrain perfectly suiting the speaker’s mental
state seems too coincidental, hinting at the presence
of something supernatural.
 CONTINUES...
 This ambiguity demonstrates both the mind’s
capacity to terrorize itself and the fact that
psychological hauntings can disturb and destroy
as much as physical danger. Whether we believe
the bird can only repeat one word or whether it
delivers a prophecy of doom, hearing
“nevermore”—a word that emphasizes the
eternal nature of the speaker’s grief and loss—is
what ultimately leaves the speaker mentally
wrecked.
  HOPELESSNESS :
 This ambiguity demonstrates both the
mind’s capacity to terrorize itself and the fact
that psychological hauntings can disturb and
destroy as much as physical danger. Whether
we believe the bird can only repeat one word
or whether it delivers a prophecy of doom,
hearing “nevermore”—a word that
emphasizes the eternal nature of the
speaker’s grief and loss—is what ultimately
leaves the speaker mentally wrecked.
 CONTINUES ...
Again, the word “nevermore” dashes this
hope as earlier in the poem, the speaker’s
own attempt to distract himself from grief by
reading also failed. Finally, the speaker asks
the raven about seeing Lenore in Heaven,
which the raven again rejects. The bird’s
refrain, “nevermore,” is an inarguable
absolute, meaning that nothing can change
about the speaker’s situation.
 CONTINUES ...
Because the speaker only asks the raven
questions about Lenore after he establishes that
the bird will always  say “nevermore,” his  pleas
for mercy act as a self-fulfilling prophecy of
despair. While we have ample textual evidence
that the speaker will not see Lenore again and
probably will not forget her, we cannot know
whether or not the speaker will see Lenore in the
afterlife, which suggests that he uses the raven’s
single word to reflect his own emotional state.
He has placed himself in a position where he will
only receive an answer that dooms him to
endless sorrow, emphasizing that he has created
his own hopelessness.
 SYMBOLS IN THE POEM :
There are  primarily eight  symbols in “The
Raven”: the raven, lenore, night’s  plutonian
shore, nepenthe, midnight, December, the
bust of Pallas, and the speaker’s chamber. All
of these symbols work together to form a
portrait of the speaker’s grief.
 LENORE:
 The narrator gives no description of Lenore. We
do not know what she looks like or what exactly
the relationship between Lenore and the
narrator is. All we know is that the narrator really
misses her. The lack of details regarding Lenore
makes her a likely symbol. She may represent
idealized love, beauty, truth, or hope in a better
world. She is “rare and radiant” we are told
several times, an angelic description, perhaps
symbolic of heaven. Lenore may symbolize
truth: the narrator cannot help but think of her,
and her ubiquitous, yet elusive, nature haunts
the narrative.
 THE RAVEN :
The most obvious symbol is contained in the
poem’s title. The raven enters the room
imperiously and holds dominion over the
narrator. The bird’s darkness symbolizes
death; hence, death becomes a constant
reminder, an imperious intruder. If taken in a
broader context, the poem may be about the
inability of man to escape his ultimate fate, a
reoccurring theme in Poe’s short  works.
 NIGHT’S PLUTONIAN SHORE :
 The phrase “Night’s Plutonian Shore”
incorporates all the negative aspects
associated with death. Pluto is the Roman
god of the underworld; hence, his shore
would be the underworld. Combined with
“night,” a common symbol for death and
nothingness, and shore, representative of the
vast ocean and all its mysterious inhabitants,
Plutonian takes on an enhanced meaning.
  NEPENTHE :
 
Nepenthe:
 The narrator desperately
searches for something that will remove his
pain and suffering. This is symbolized by
Nepenthe, an ancient drug used to help one
relieve sorrows.
  MIDNIGHT :
 
Midnight:
 Traditionally referred to as the
witching hour and the darkest part of night–
midnight is more than a number on the clock.
It is no accident that Poe chooses this as the
time for the bird’s  arrival.
 THE BUST OF PALLAS :
Pallas Athena was the Greek goddess of
wisdom. It is upon this wisdom that the raven
settles, adding credence, at least according to
the narrator, to its utterances. The bust of
Pallas and the raven’s subsequent perch on it
may be ironic, for it is the narrator that gives
the bird such wisdom. A casual observer
would assume the bird sits there because it
seems like a logical resting place.
 CONTINUOUS...
. If you’re ever in Europe, note how the
pigeons perch themselves on statues in the
center of town. Only a moron would assume a
bird takes on the character of a statue on
which he perches. I don’t think, for example,
that a bird resting on Napoleon’s shoulder
suddenly becomes a ruthless general.
 DECEMBER :
December:
 Nothing lives in the winter.
December is in the winter. December
symbolizes death. I
 
           THANK  YOU
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"The Raven" by Edgar Allan Poe is a narrative poem exploring themes of grief and psychological terror. The poem follows a distraught lover who is haunted by a talking raven that repeatedly utters the word "Nevermore," driving the protagonist into madness. Through the use of folklore, mythological, and classical references, Poe creates a dark and atmospheric work that remains a classic in literature.

  • Analysis
  • Symbolism
  • The Raven
  • Edgar Allan Poe
  • Poetry

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  1. ANALYSIS AND SYMBOLISM IN THE POEM THE RAVEN A.J. SALEEMA KATHOON ASSISTANT PROFESSOR OF ENGLISH HAJEE KARUTHA ROWTHER HOWDIA COLLEGE,UTHAMAPALAYAM.

  2. ABOUT THE POEM : "The Raven" is a narrative poem byAmerican writer Edgar Allan Poe. First published in January 1845, the poem is often noted for its musicality, stylized language, and supernatural atmosphere. It tells of a talking raven's mysterious visit to a distraught lover, tracing the man's slow descent into madness. The lover, often identified as a student,[1][2]is lamenting the loss of his love, Lenore. Sitting on a bust of Pallas, the raven seems to further distress the protagonist with its constant repetition of the word "Nevermore".

  3. CONTINUES.... The poem makes use of folk, mythological, religious, and classical references. "The Raven" was first attributed to Poe in print in the New York Evening Mirror on January 29, 1845. Its publication made Poe popular in his lifetime, although it did not bring him much financial success. The poem was soon reprinted, parodied, and illustrated. Critical opinion is divided as to the poem's literary status, but it nevertheless remains one of the most famous poems ever written.[4]

  4. THEMES : THE ISOLATING POWER OF GRIEF : The poem explores how grief can overcome a person s ability to live in the present and engage with society. Over the course of the poem, the speaker s inability to forget his lost love Lenore drives him to despair and madness. At the beginning, the speaker describes himself as weak and weary, suggesting that his attempts to distract himself from Lenore s memory by reading have only exhausted him. Although he is initially amused by the raven, the raven s word nevermore soon reminds the speaker of how he won t ever see Lenore again.

  5. CONTINUES ... The power of this revelation moves him so deeply that he believes the air has grown denser, making it more difficult to breathe and emphasizing that Lenore s presence in his memory completely changes his perception of reality. Though the speaker tries to convince himself that he should forget his grief, the raven s refrain takes him back to the reality of his loss, again taking him out of the present moment. When he tells the raven to leave his loneliness unbroken, he s emphasizing that his grief has caused him to shut himself off from the world, but, paradoxically, he s not truly alone because the memory of Lenore keeps him company.

  6. PSYCHOLOGICAL TERROR : Despite the poem s eerie atmosphere, everything that happens could actually have a rational explanation. The speaker begins the poem in an unsettled state, trying to distract himself from his grief, and the quaint and curious volume he reads could certainly put him in a dark and suggestible state of mind that the dreary December night only enhances. Ravens can imitate human speech, and a raven could theoretically make a noise similar to the word nevermore. However, the events of the poem are undeniably ghostly, and the bird s refrain perfectly suiting the speaker s mental state seems too coincidental, hinting at the presence of something supernatural.

  7. CONTINUES... This ambiguity demonstrates both the mind s capacity to terrorize itself and the fact that psychological hauntings can disturb and destroy as much as physical danger. Whether we believe the bird can only repeat one word or whether it delivers a prophecy of doom, hearing nevermore a word that emphasizes the eternal nature of the speaker s grief and loss is what ultimately leaves the speaker mentally wrecked.

  8. HOPELESSNESS : This ambiguity demonstrates both the mind s capacity to terrorize itself and the fact that psychological hauntings can disturb and destroy as much as physical danger. Whether we believe the bird can only repeat one word or whether it delivers a prophecy of doom, hearing nevermore a word that emphasizes the eternal nature of the speaker s grief and loss is what ultimately leaves the speaker mentally wrecked.

  9. CONTINUES ... Again, the word nevermore dashes this hope as earlier in the poem, the speaker s own attempt to distract himself from grief by reading also failed. Finally, the speaker asks the raven about seeing Lenore in Heaven, which the raven again rejects. The bird s refrain, nevermore, is an inarguable absolute, meaning that nothing can change about the speaker s situation.

  10. CONTINUES ... Because the speaker only asks the raven questions about Lenore after he establishes that the bird will always say nevermore, his pleas for mercy act as a self-fulfilling prophecy of despair. While we have ample textual evidence that the speaker will not see Lenore again and probably will not forget her, we cannot know whether or not the speaker will see Lenore in the afterlife, which suggests that he uses the raven s single word to reflect his own emotional state. He has placed himself in a position where he will only receive an answer that dooms him to endless sorrow, emphasizing that he has created his own hopelessness.

  11. SYMBOLS IN THE POEM : There are primarily eight symbols in The Raven : the raven, lenore, night s plutonian shore, nepenthe, midnight, December, the bust of Pallas, and the speaker s chamber. All of these symbols work together to form a portrait of the speaker s grief.

  12. LENORE: The narrator gives no description of Lenore. We do not know what she looks like or what exactly the relationship between Lenore and the narrator is. All we know is that the narrator really misses her. The lack of details regarding Lenore makes her a likely symbol. She may represent idealized love, beauty, truth, or hope in a better world. She is rare and radiant we are told several times, an angelic description, perhaps symbolic of heaven. Lenore may symbolize truth: the narrator cannot help but think of her, and her ubiquitous, yet elusive, nature haunts the narrative.

  13. THE RAVEN : The most obvious symbol is contained in the poem s title. The raven enters the room imperiously and holds dominion over the narrator. The bird s darkness symbolizes death; hence, death becomes a constant reminder, an imperious intruder. If taken in a broader context, the poem may be about the inability of man to escape his ultimate fate, a reoccurring theme in Poe s short works.

  14. NIGHTS PLUTONIAN SHORE : The phrase Night s Plutonian Shore incorporates all the negative aspects associated with death. Pluto is the Roman god of the underworld; hence, his shore would be the underworld. Combined with night, a common symbol for death and nothingness, and shore, representative of the vast ocean and all its mysterious inhabitants, Plutonian takes on an enhanced meaning.

  15. NEPENTHE : Nepenthe:The narrator desperately searches for something that will remove his pain and suffering. This is symbolized by Nepenthe, an ancient drug used to help one relieve sorrows.

  16. MIDNIGHT : Midnight:Traditionally referred to as the witching hour and the darkest part of night midnight is more than a number on the clock. It is no accident that Poe chooses this as the time for the bird s arrival.

  17. THE BUST OF PALLAS : Pallas Athena was the Greek goddess of wisdom. It is upon this wisdom that the raven settles, adding credence, at least according to the narrator, to its utterances. The bust of Pallas and the raven s subsequent perch on it may be ironic, for it is the narrator that gives the bird such wisdom. A casual observer would assume the bird sits there because it seems like a logical resting place.

  18. CONTINUOUS... . If you re ever in Europe, note how the pigeons perch themselves on statues in the centerof town. Only a moron would assume a bird takes on the character of a statue on which he perches. I don t think, for example, that a bird resting on Napoleon s shoulder suddenly becomes a ruthless general.

  19. DECEMBER : December: Nothing lives in the winter. December is in the winter. December symbolizes death. I

  20. THANK YOU

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