The speaker describes his mood at the beginning of "The Raven" as "weary" and "dreary."
Speaker, is another word for talker, if you mean like in everyday conversations. EG. choose the speaker for your group, said Allan. So Allan is the speaker.
The first question the speaker asks the raven in "The Raven" by Edgar Allan Poe is "Tell me what thy lordly name is on the Night's Plutonian shore!"
like a demon
His lost love
No, the speaker's conflict with the raven is not resolved at the end of the poem "The Raven" by Edgar Allan Poe. The raven continues to haunt the speaker with its one-word response, "Nevermore," leaving the speaker in a state of despair and sorrow.
The dialogue and rhyme in lines 29-32 of the ballad Barbara Allan help to express the speaker's deep regret and sorrow over the loss of his love, Barbara Allan. The structured rhyme scheme and dialogue emphasize the emotional impact of the situation, highlighting the speaker's overwhelming grief and despair.
Suspense :)
He asks if he will ever see his love again
In the excerpt from "The Raven" by Edgar Allan Poe, the speaker is reading and trying to distract himself from his overwhelming grief for his lost love Lenore when he hears the mysterious knocking at the door.
Allan F. Cook has written: 'Discrete levels of beginning height of meteors in streams' -- subject(s): Meteor streams
Edgar Allan Poe's use of a first-person speaker in "The Raven" allows readers to experience the speaker's deepening despair and isolation more intimately. The first-person perspective creates a sense of immediacy and emotional intensity, drawing readers into the speaker's unraveling mental state as he interacts with the mysterious raven, enhancing the overall haunting and melancholic tone of the poem.
In "The Raven," Edgar Allan Poe describes the shadow as a "demon's." It adds to the eerie and haunting atmosphere of the poem.