In The Raven by Edgar Allan Poe, one sees the internal torment of a man in mourning for the lost love of a maiden, named Lenore that has died. The narrator expresses a sea of emotions over the vision of a raven haunting and taunting him. As the man sits in his chamber he only seems to notice the negativity of his surroundings in a depressive state of mind over his lost. ..A midnight dreary, while I pondered, weak and weary. He was, as many people seem to be when they are depressed, in a lethargic and calm state nearly sleeping. He then was disturb by a tapping noise and slowly grew from slight excitement into fear and nervousness over the commotion. And the silken, sad, uncertain rustling of each purple curtain thrilled me- filled me with fantastic terrors never felt before.
The narrator tried to rationalize the situation into some coincidental incident of someone at his door yet, there was no one there. To this he plainly states, Deep into the darkness peering, long I stood there wondering, fearing, only to perhaps start to question his sanity until he heard another noise. At this point in the poem one may clearly see his very painful condition and state of mind as he wishfully whispers the word Lenore. The marginal state between idealism and reality has blurred. As the narrator tensely turns to the window to explore the disturbance, there the reader meets the raven that has entered into the room and placed himself above the chamber door. Now with this new component in the scene, the narrator explores his inner thoughts and fear openly to the reader. The raven seems to amuse the narrator, Then this ebony bird beguiling my sad fancy into smiling, by the grave and stern decorum of the countenance it wore.
The Essay on The Unreliable Narrator
In The Reluctant Fundamentalist, the narrator is a very pleasing, intelligent individual named Changez. Changez is speaking with an unnamed American man throughout the entire novel, and is doing so without the conversational input of the American. In other words, this novel is one strung out monologue, seeing as Changez is the only one to speak or think. This puts the reader in a situation in ...
In a jocular manner the narrator initiates a conversation with the raven, still intrigued by its appearance, mannerism, and specially its name, Nevermore. The raven then becomes a materialized symbol of the narrators own inner self, The Raven, sitting lonely on the placid bust, spoke only that one word, as if his soul in that one word he did outpour. Furthermore, the narrator is in the same manner sitting lonely in his chamber chair surrounded by all the things that remind him of his lost love. The narrators own soul is also being outpoured in that one word, for the permanent lost of his Lenore that he will nevermore see again. The speaker does not seem to have any hope and drowns in his own sorrow as he does believe the raven to stay, On the morrow he will leave me, as my Hopes have flown before. Just as Lenore has left him and since he put all his life, soul, and Hopes on her he has no aspirations and positive outlook on anything anymore.
The speaker tries to rationalize the replies of the Raven just as he tried to rationalize the noises heard before. The speaker then starts to question what the raven means by nevermore. Now as the narrator sits reclining, looking at the raven and feeling uneasiness as its stares back at him as if it was looking into his soul, the memory of she, Lenore, comes to him to question where this bird has really come from. The relator believes that the raven has come from God and the heaven and the angels have sent him to remind the narrator of his lost love Lenore. Moreover, at this he becomes angry and fumes out at the bird, he now refers to it as a thing of evil and at the same time a prophet. At this point he becomes insolent in despair trying to get answers from the raven as to where it really comes from and whether he will ever see Lenore again.
He becomes desperate in his quest to know when he will see her if ever again. When the raven answers him with nevermore he becomes enraged and asks the bird to leave, for it had become a liar. He implores to be left alone in his loneliness in this home by Horror haunted. However, the raven is still sitting above the chamber door. The self-imposing torture that the narrator has to endure is a symptom of his pain for a lost love that he can not seem to recover from. The anguish of his pain has created a permanent vision for him to ponder on in his self-made hell, the chamber in which he resides. This melancholic man has all the characteristics of someone on the verge of a psychosis breakdown. His self-absorption over his lost that he seizes to live in a world outside of his memory filled chamber..
The Essay on Death Of Lenore Raven Narrator Door
... maiden whom the angels name Lenore-" (733). The answer "nevermore" sends the narrator into a rage. He calls the raven a "prophet", but cannot ... floor"-and cries for nepenthe to make him forget his lost Lenore and the pain he has felt since her death. Nepenthe, ... takes the words of the raven to heart, especially the raven's words about Lenore and the state of her soul, as evidenced by his ...