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http://www.poedecoder.com/essays/raven/

A lonely man tries to ease his "sorrow for the lost Lenore," by distracting his mind with old books of "forgotten lore." He is interrupted while he is "nearly napping," by a "tapping on [his] chamber door." As he opens up the door, he finds "darkness there and nothing more." Into the darkness he whispers, "Lenore," hoping his lost love had come back, but all that could be heard was "an echo [that] murmured back the word 'Lenore!'"
With a burning soul, the man returns to his chamber, and this time he can hear a tapping at the window lattice. As he "flung [open] the shutter," "in [there] stepped a stately Raven," the bird of ill-omen (Poe, 1850). The raven perched on the bust of Pallas, the goddess of wisdom in Greek mythology, above his chamber door.
The man asks the Raven for his name, and surprisingly it answers, and croaks "Nevermore." The man knows that the bird does not speak from wisdom, but has been taught by "some unhappy master," and that the word "nevermore" is its only "stock and store."
The man welcomes the raven, and is afraid that the raven will be gone in the morning, "as [his] Hopes have flown before"; however, the raven answers, "Nevermore." The man smiled, and pulled up a chair, interested in what the raven "meant in croaking, ‘Nevermore.’" The chair, where Lenore once sat, brought back painful memories. The man, who knows the irrational nature in the raven’s speech, still cannot help but ask the raven questions. Since the narrator is aware that the raven only knows one word, he can anticipate the bird's responses. "Is there balm in Gilead?" - "Nevermore." Can Lenore be found in paradise? - "Nevermore." "Take thy form from off my door!" - "Nevermore." Finally the man concedes, realizing that to continue this dialogue would be pointless. And his "soul from out that shadow" that the raven throws on the floor, "Shall be lifted -- Nevermore!"
Symbols
In this poem, one of the most famous American poems ever, Poe uses several symbols to take the poem to a higher level. The most obvious symbol is, of course, the raven itself. When Poe had decided to use a refrain that repeated the word "nevermore," he found that it would be most effective if he used a non-reasoning creature to utter the word. It would make little sense to use a human, since the human could reason to answer the questions (Poe, 1850). In "The Raven" it is important that the answers to the questions are already known, to illustrate the self-torture to which the narrator exposes himself. This way of interpreting signs that do not bear a real meaning, is "one of the most profound impulses of human nature" (Quinn, 1998:441).
Poe also considered a parrot as the bird instead of the raven; however, because of the melancholy tone, and the symbolism of ravens as birds of ill-omen, he found the raven more suitable for the mood in the poem (Poe, 1850). Quoth the Parrot, "Nevermore?"
Another obvious symbol is the bust of Pallas. Why did the raven decide to perch on the goddess of wisdom? One reason could be, because it would lead the narrator to believe that the raven spoke from wisdom, and was not just repeating its only "stock and store," and to signify the scholarship of the narrator. Another reason for using "Pallas" in the poem was, according to Poe himself, simply because of the "sonorousness of the word, Pallas, itself" (Poe, 1850).
A less obvious symbol, might be the use of "midnight" in the first verse, and "December" in the second verse. Both midnight and December, symbolize an end of something, and also the anticipation of something new, a change, to happen. The midnight in December, might very well be New Year’s eve, a date most of us connect with change. This also seems to be what Viktor Rydberg believes when he is translating "The Raven" to Swedish, since he uses the phrase "årets sista natt var inne, " ("The last night of the year had arrived"😉. Kenneth Silverman connected the use of December with the death of Edgar’s mother (Silverman, 1992:241), who died in that month; whether this is true or not is, however, not significant to its meaning in the poem.
The chamber in which the narrator is positioned, is used to signify the loneliness of the man, and the sorrow he feels for the loss of Lenore. The room is richly furnished, and reminds the narrator of his lost love, which helps to create an effect of beauty in the poem. The tempest outside, is used to even more signify the isolation of this man, to show a sharp contrast between the calmness in the chamber and the tempestuous night.
The phrase "from out my heart," Poe claims, is used, in combination with the answer "Nevermore," to let the narrator realize that he should not try to seek a moral in what has been previously narrated (Poe, 1850).
Words
Poe had an extensive vocabulary, which is obvious to the readers of both his poetry as well as his fiction. Sometimes this meant introducing words that were not commonly used. In "The Raven," the use of ancient and poetic language seems appropriate, since the poem is about a man spending most of his time with books of "forgotten lore."

# "Seraphim," in the fourteenth verse, "perfumed by an unseen censer / Swung by seraphim whose foot-falls tinkled..." is used to illustrate the swift, invisible way a scent spreads in a room. A seraphim is one of the six-winged angels standing in the presence of God.
# "Nepenthe," from the same verse, is a potion, used by ancients to induce forgetfullnes of pain or sorrow.
# "Balm in Gilead," from the following verse, is a soothing ointment made in Gilead, a mountainous region of Palestine east of the Jordan river.
# "Aidenn," from the sixteenth verse, is an Arabic word for Eden or paradise.
# "Plutonian," characteristic of Pluto, the god of the underworld in Roman mythology.

The Philosphy of Composition
Edgar Allan Poe wrote an essay on the creation of "The Raven," entitled "The Philosophy of Composition." In that essay Poe describes the work of composing the poem as if it were a mathematical problem, and derides the poets that claim that they compose "by a species of fine frenzy - an ecstatic intuition - and would positively shudder at letting the public take a peep behind the scenes." Whether Poe was as calculating as he claims when he wrote "The Raven" or not is a question that cannot be answered; it is, however, unlikely that he created it exactly like he described in his essay. The thoughts occurring in the essay might well have occurred to Poe while he was composing it.
In "The Philosophy of Composition," Poe stresses the need to express a single effect when the literary work is to be read in one sitting. A poem should always be written short enough to be read in one sitting, and should, therefore, strive to achieve this single, unique effect. Consequently, Poe figured that the length of a poem should stay around one hundred lines, and "The Raven" is 108 lines.
The most important thing to consider in "Philosophy" is the fact that "The Raven," as well as many of Poe's tales, is written backwards. The effect is determined first, and the whole plot is set; then the web grows backwards from that single effect. Poe's "tales of ratiocination," e.g. the Dupin tales, are written in the same manner. "Nothing is more clear than that every plot, worth the name, must be elaborated to its denouement before anything be attempted with the pen" (Poe, 1850).
It was important to Poe to make "The Raven" "universally appreciable." It should be appreciated by the public, as well as the critics. Poe chose Beauty to be the theme of the poem, since "Beauty is the sole legitimate province of the poem" (Poe, 1850). After choosing Beauty as the province, Poe considered sadness to be the highest manifestation of beauty. "Beauty of whatever kind in its supreme development invariably excites the sensitive soul to tears. Melancholy is thus the most legitimate of all the poetical tones" (Poe, 1850).
Of all melancholy topics, Poe wanted to use the one that was universally understood, and therefore, he chose Death as his topic. Poe (along with other writers) believed that the death of a beautiful woman was the most poetical use of death, because it closely allies itself with Beauty.
After establishing subjects and tones of the poem, Poe started by writing the stanza that brought the narrator's "interrogation" of the raven to a climax, the third verse from the end, and he made sure that no preceeding stanza would "surpass this in rythmical effect." Poe then worked backwards from this stanza and used the word "Nevermore" in many different ways, so that even with the repetition of this word, it would not prove to be monotonous.
Poe builds the tension in this poem up, stanza by stanza, but after the climaxing stanza he tears the whole thing down, and lets the narrator know that there is no meaning in searching for a moral in the raven's "nevermore". The Raven is established as a symbol for the narrator's "Mournful and never-ending remembrance." "And my soul from out that shadow, that lies floating on the floor, shall be lifted - nevermore!"

😛

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Originally posted by Peachy
[b]http://www.poedecoder.com/essays/raven/

A lonely man tries to ease his "sorrow for the lost Lenore," by distracting his mind with old books of "forgotten lore." He is interrupted while he is "nearly napping," by a "tapping on [his] chamber door." As he opens up the door, he finds "darkness there and nothing more." Into the darkness he whispers, "Lenore," ...[text shortened]...
thank you Peachy.

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Originally posted by Kaboooomba
thank you Peachy.
You are very welcome sir.

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Originally posted by XanthosNZ
You didn't write it, it's not worth a dime. Get a job you hack.
😏

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that has been my favourite poem ever since i saw it on 'The Simpsons'. lol

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YOU' LL NEVER WALK ALONE

When you walk through a storm
Hold your head up high,
And don't be afraid of the dark.
At the end of a storm,
There's a golden sky,
And the sweet silver song of a lark.
Walk on through the wind, Walk on through the rain,
Though your dreams be tossed and blown...
Walk on, walk on, with hope in your heart,
And you'll never walk alone... You'll never walk alone.
Walk on, walk on, with hope in your heart,
And you'll never walk alone...
You'll never walk alone.

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Originally posted by belgrade
YOU' LL NEVER WALK ALONE

When you walk through a storm
Hold your head up high,
And don't be afraid of the dark.
At the end of a storm,
There's a golden sky,
And the sweet silver song of a lark.
Walk on through the wind, Walk on through the rain,
Though your dreams be tossed and blown...
Walk on, walk on, with hope in your heart,
And you'll never ...[text shortened]... lk on, with hope in your heart,
And you'll never walk alone...
You'll never walk alone.
I walk a lonely road
The only one that I have ever known
Don't know where it goes
But it's home to me and I walk alone

I walk this empty street
On the Boulevard of Broken Dreams
Where the city sleeps
and I'm the only one and I walk alone

I walk alone
I walk alone

I walk alone
I walk a...

1 edit
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Originally posted by belgrade
YOU' LL NEVER WALK ALONE

When you walk through a storm
Hold your head up high,
And don't be afraid of the dark.
At the end of a storm,
There's a golden sky,
And the sweet silver song of a lark.
Walk on through the wind, Walk on through the rain,
Though your dreams be tossed and blown...
Walk on, walk on, with hope in your heart,
And you'll never lk on, with hope in your heart,
And you'll never walk alone...
You'll never walk alone.
&search=liverpool%20kop

🙂

Edit: ...though trev might not appreciate this on his thread 😛

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Originally posted by Peachy
You are very welcome sir.
it took you a whole minute to write that? 😉.

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Originally posted by ElleEffSeee
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SyM-NhYIzxo&search=liverpool%20kop

🙂

Edit: ...though trev might not appreciate this on his thread 😛
😵

1 edit
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Originally posted by ElleEffSeee
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SyM-NhYIzxo&search=liverpool%20kop
Cor, goosebumps ahoy.

Were you there that night?

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No unfortunately - I'm too far away in America :'(

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Originally posted by trevor33
Once upon a midnight dreary, while I pondered, weak and weary,
Over many a quaint and curious volume of forgotten lore,
While I nodded, nearly napping, suddenly there came a tapping,
As of some one gently rapping, rapping at my chamber door.
"'Tis some visitor," I muttered, "tapping at my chamber door--
Only this, and nothing more."

Ah, distin ...[text shortened]... r allan poe, pure class
Once when I was hunting wabbits, whiwe I wandewed, twowwing cawwots,
Chasing onwy a fast and fuwious wabbit wif a wotten cowe
Whiwe I pwodded, neawwy cwapping, suddenwy thewe came a yapping,
Must be that un-godwy wabbit, yapping 'cwoss the fowest fwoow.
"It's the wa..wa...wa... I stuttewed, yapping 'cwoss the fowest fwoow

"What's up doc?"...and nothing mowe

Ah, instinctwy I wemembewed, how I pwanned his bweak dismembew,
As the thought of fwying wabbit made my taste buds dwoow some mowe.
Eagewwy I stawt the fiwe, cooking him's my gweat desiwe,
Ah, the dwipping gwease of wabbit, wabbit that I've chased befowe.
Fow some wawe and succuwent wabbit, though the chase has been a chowe...

Dinking this, the fiwe woaws

Dat the wabbit's mad I'm cewtain, when I bwast him he'ww be huwting,
Fiww me...fiww me wif fantastic wabbit nevew cooked befowe.
Soon now his heawt won't be beating, on the spit he wiww be heating,
'Tis some wabbit I'ww be eating soon upon the fowest fwoow.
Just some tasty wabbit eating wight hewe on the fowest fwoow.

Just some wabbit...nothing mowe

Pwesentwy my pwan gwew stwongew, sawivating wif such hungew,
"Siw", said I, "Ow wabbit", wouwd you wike some dinnew?" I impwowe.
But the fact is I was twapping, oh so sneaky I was twapping,
Den I faintwy heawd his yapping, yapping thwough the fowest fwoow
Dough I wasn't suwe I heawd him, toss the cawwots on the fwoow

Hewe's some cawwots. (Oh, dat scwewy wabbit! )..yes, they'we youws

Out into the fowest peewing, wong I stood thewe, dwoowing, stawing
Hoping, hatching schemes no fweaking wabbit evew dweamed befowe.
But the cawwots sat untaken, did the wabbit know I'm fakin'?
And the onwy wowds now spoken wewe the wowds that I depwowe.
Just a whispew, but the echo echoed back what I depwowe.

"What's up Doc?"...and nothing mowe

I bwast into the fowest bwindwy, to his taunts I don't take kindwy,
Maybe I just need some bait that's somewhat diffewent than befowe
Suwewy, said I, if I show up, wif a wabbit doww I bwow up,
Dwess hew up in sexy make up, this the wabbit wiww expwowe.

He's a wabbit...say no mowe

Dewe, just hanging in my cwoset, wike a wabbit-y Fawwah Fawcett,
In thewe was a shapewy wabbit, just a pwastic bwow up whowe
Fwiends have asked me why I bought it, cause it's cweaw that I have pawed it
"What's a sexy wabbit wady doing on youw bedwoom fwoow?"
"Seawching fow a wascawwy wabbit, wight hewe on my bedwoom fwoow.

Hoping that he twies to scowe

Den just suddenwy I heawd knocking, then my fancy doow unwocking,
In she dwifts so bwonde and shocking, in the wow-cut dwess she wowe.
Dough hew cweft is shown and shaven, "WOW" I said, stawt misbehavin',
Shapewy twim, I ain't just wavin', swobbewing ovew statewy whowe.
Teww me, what is Twacy Wowds now doing on my bedwoom fwoow?

Qwof the wabbit..."She's a whowe"

AAAUGH! I stawtwed, puww my pants up, hadn't heawd the wabbit pwance up,
Den my antsy wittwe weenie, caught in zippew, it now towe.
And the wabbit stood thewe smiwking, wif a camewa he'd been wuwking,
Wascawwy wabbit set a camewa wight above my bedwoom doow.
Bwasted wabbit had insuwance...pictuwes of me and the whowe

Now I chase him ....Nevewmowe

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by elmer fudd. even classier

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There once was a man from Carri,
Who tried to pee up a tree,
But the tree was too high,
so he pee-ed in his eye,
and now the old bugger can't see.