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    Edgar Allan Poe

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    Chong Mrs. Gronlund AP English IV 21 February 2012 The Influence of Women in Edgar Allen Poe’s Works Edgar Allan Poe is considered one of the most inspiring writers of the nineteenth century‚ creating a new extension to American literature. He is famously known for  writing “The Fall of the House of Usher” and “The Raven.” His writings are often times considered dark and bleak due to past experiences. The experiences Poe includes in his writings are results of the women he met in his lifetime. Within

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    Edgar Allan Poe

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    Edgar Allan Poe’s writing does truly contain unique stylistic elements. His writing style is very special and plays a trick in questioning the mind. Poe’s story “The Cask of Amontillado” displays the use of the stylistic element verbal irony. Poe’s story also exhibits mood‚ to create plot and value. Edgar Allan Poe used verbal irony through the story “The Cask of Amontillado”. An example of Poe’s verbal irony; when the main character Montressor speaks to Fortunato and says “My dear Fortunato‚

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    Edgar Allan Poe According to ( Roy ) ‚ Edgar Allan Poe ( 1/19/1809 ‚ Boston‚ MA - 7.x . 1849 ‚ Baltimore‚ MD ) - poet‚ novelist‚ critic‚ editor ‚ "the man captive mysteries of life " and " covered the holy passion to understand his soul " ( M.Gorky )‚ one of the first U.S. professional writers ‚ who lived exclusively literary work : the artist although knowing tides popularity ‚ but not immediately understood and valued at home. INTRODUCTION CREATIVITY Edgar Allan Poe "The Raven"

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    Edgar Allan Poe

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    Sean Khan 10/26/13 Period 3 English Edgar Allan Poe After having read some of Edgar Allan Poe’s works‚ such as “The Tell-Tale Heart”‚ “The Fall of The House of Usher”‚ and “The Raven”‚ when I hear his name I imagine murderers‚ madmen‚ premature burials‚ and mysterious women coming back from their graves. He was a very versatile writer who was able to write novels‚ poetry‚ textbooks‚ short stories‚ hundreds of essays and book reviews. He is also widely known as the innovator for modern-day

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    B.P. English 19 February 2014 An Analysis of “To The River___” by Edgar Allan Poe “Thou art an emblem of the glow/ Of beauty- the unhidden heart-/ The playful maziness of art” (3-5). “To The River___” by Edgar Allan Poe is a poem about a young boy who is enthralled with the daughter of Old Alberto. The origin of the poem may be explained by the fact that Poe wrote it at the mere age of eighteen; a time when emotions flow freely and the mind is yet to be fully developed. The poem describes the

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    Leyva ENGL 1302 04/04/2013 Edgar Allan Poe: Literary Analysis The Cask of Amontillado is a short story written by Edgar Allan Poe in the 19th century. ”The Cask of Amontillado” is a classic tale of revenge and murder‚ somewhat familiar in most of Poe’s works. In “The Cask of Amontillado” Protagonist Montressor has a vendetta against Antagonist Fortunato for apparently the thousands of “Injuries” Fortunato has caused him‚ leading to Montressor killing Fortunato. (Poe 74-79) While reading this

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    the opening so far that I could see him as he lay upon his bed" (Poe 291). This clearly implies that the narrator can see his future victim: "I could see him as he lay upon his bed." But then the narrator tells us that although the victim awakes startled‚ the narrator simply stood his ground in the doorway since "His room was as black as pitch with the thick darkness...and so I knew that he could not see the opening of the door..." (Poe 292). This implies that the room and hallway are pitch black‚ which

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    Edgar Allan Poe

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    Viewing Romanticism through Poe “I felt that I breathed an atmosphere of sorrow” (The Fall of the House of Usher 162) could practically sum up nearly all of Edgar Allan Poe’s works and his life. Throughout his many short stories‚ among which I read The Fall of the House of Usher‚ The Murders in the Rue Morgue‚ The Pit and the Pendulum‚ The Black Cat‚ The Purloined Letter‚ and The Cask of Amontillado‚ the constant theme conveyed is that of darkness. Some of his works‚ such as The Fall of the House

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    In Edgar Allen Poe’s poem‚ “The Bells‚” he uses word choice and sound devices that reflect the individual‚ suggesting that people interpret their surroundings based on their mood. In the first stanza of “The Bells”‚ the use of alliteration causes the individual to experience delight. Poe writes about silver bells whose sound can cause a merry mood. The bells tinkle while the stars in the sky shine “With a crystalline delight” (Poe). The alliteration of the words crystalline and delight gives off

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    Edgar Allan Poe

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    The Revolution of Poe Edgar Allan Poe has an acute and distinctive ability to capture the darkest and most heinous fascination of his readers‚ even years following his mysterious death. “He is the most often read of all of his contemporaries‚ but this is no accident‚ for this neurotic and unhappy artist is strangely modern‚ oddly keeping in with our own neurotic and unhappy age” (Van Stern xvi). What Poe introduced to America was the depth of darkest places of the human psyche‚ which was a relatively

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