In "The Raven," the narrator is trying to forget his lost love, Lenore, who has passed away. The raven that visits him serves as a symbol of his grief and inability to overcome his mourning.
In "The Raven," the speaker wants to forget the loss of his beloved Lenore. However, the raven's repeated refrain of "Nevermore" serves as a haunting reminder of his grief and inability to move on.
You need to be a bit more specific here. What is the speaker in? Which end are you talking about: the speaker end or the amplifier end? What are you trying to hook up? Phil
It will kill you. Forget trying to find out.
Trying to forget you
Not only are you preventing the speaker from completing what he or she is trying to say, but f you speak when someone else is speaking, you (and others) can't listen to what the speaker is trying to say. If you don't listen to what the speaker is saying, it's very difficult to formulate an articulate response.
are you trying to ask what come's before the song before i forget if so its pulse of the maggots
The speaker in The Raven can best be described as a melancholy person. The person is lonely and trying to forget his lost love, Lenore.
His snide remarks undermined the point the speaker was trying to make.
the questions that a careful listener should ask include:who is the speaker,what is speaker trying to say,what do the speaker's facial expression mean
by trying to get busy and no thinking about her.........anyways if u get a better answer....pls update
It means that they are trying to forget about the past, trying to move on or are trying to go out with that person again.