the narrot creates mood by opening up with the windows opening
It is Edgar Allan Poe
Voila!
"The Bells" by Edgar Allan Poe has a varied rhyme scheme and meter throughout the poem. The rhyme scheme changes from stanza to stanza, ranging from ABAC to ABCB. The meter also varies, with some lines in trochaic meter and others in iambic meter.
To create melancholy for the reader.
In "The Bells" by Edgar Allan Poe, different feelings are expressed as the poem progresses. The sound of the bells at first evokes happiness and joy in the first stanza, then transitions to a sense of foreboding and unease in the second stanza, followed by a feeling of despair and mourning in the third stanza, and lastly, a sense of terror and alarm in the final stanza. The poem's shifting emotions mirror the changing sounds and tones of the bells themselves.
John Allan is Edgar Allan Poe's foster father.
you can ask the director on quandour@sindikaproductions.com
Robert Allan Edgar was born in 1940.
Edgar Allan Brown was born in 1888.
Edgar Allan Brown died in 1975.
the use of imagery in the second stanza.... in lines 12--15! :) and the sense of hopelessness....
Summary of the 6th Stanza of 'The Raven' by Edgar Allan Poe: As I turned and closed the door, I heard a louder knocking that seemed to come from the window. I went to investigate, but it must have been the wind and nothing more!