"weak and weary"
"While I nodded, nearly napping"
"surcease of sorrow"
"lost Lenore"
"rare and radiant"
"silken, sad, uncertain"
''doubting,dreaming dreams no mortals ever dared to dream before''
Yes, TONS of it.
it is not an answer
haPPy, siLLy,
If you mean literary devices, there is a lot of personification (a raven cannot normally talk), repetition (repeating nevermore), onomatopoeia (tapping on his chamber door), and the whole story is basically one big hyperbole.
I am here you know I can see you clearly you make me very dreary
Some examples of feminine rhyme in the poem "The Raven" by Edgar Allan Poe are: "dreary" and "weary" "token" and "spoken" "burden" and "word in" "betook" and "forsook"
The repetition of vowel sounds inside words.EX: Peter piper peck some pickuls.
An example of assonance in "The Raven" is the repetition of the short "o" sound in the phrase "And the silken, sad, uncertain rustling of each purple curtain."
Whenever he states the grievances, it almost always starts off with, "He has..."
Redundancy and replications are examples of the emotional word repetition. The repetition of the the woodpecker's noise was greatly annoying.
with the repetition of “nevermore” apex
In Edgar Allan Poe's poem "The Raven," Lenore is the lost love of the narrator who is visited by a mysterious raven. The raven serves as a symbol of the narrator's grief and inability to move on from Lenore's death, haunting him with its repetition of the word "Nevermore." The connection between Lenore and the raven lies in the narrator's mourning and the raven's symbolization of his grief and despair.