Symbols
In this poem, one of the most
famous American poems ever, Poe uses several symbols to take the poem to a
higher level. The most obvious symbol is, of course, the raven itself. When Poe
had decided to use a refrain that repeated the word "nevermore," he found that
it would be most effective if he used a non-reasoning creature to utter the
word. It would make little sense to use a human, since the human could reason to
answer the questions (Poe, 1850). In "The Raven" it is important that the
answers to the questions are already known, to illustrate the self-torture to
which the narrator exposes himself. This way of interpreting signs that do not
bear a real meaning, is "one of the most profound impulses of human nature"
(Quinn, 1998:441).
Poe also considered a parrot as the bird instead of the
raven; however, because of the melancholy tone, and the symbolism of ravens as
birds of ill-omen, he found the raven more suitable for the mood in the poem
(Poe, 1850). Quoth the Parrot, "Nevermore?"
Another obvious symbol is the
bust of Pallas. Why did the raven decide to perch on the goddess of wisdom? One
reason could be, because it would lead the narrator to believe that the raven
spoke from wisdom, and was not just repeating its only "stock and store," and to
signify the scholarship of the narrator. Another reason for using "Pallas" in
the poem was, according to Poe himself, simply because of the "sonorousness of
the word, Pallas, itself" (Poe, 1850).
A less obvious symbol, might be the
use of "midnight" in the first verse, and "December" in the second verse. Both
midnight and December, symbolize an end of something, and also the anticipation
of something new, a change, to happen. The midnight in December, might very well
be New Year’s eve, a date most of us connect with change. This also seems to be
what Viktor Rydberg believes when he is translating "The Raven" to Swedish,
since he uses the phrase "årets sista natt var inne, " ("The last night of the
year had arrived"). Kenneth Silverman connected the use of December with the
death of Edgar’s mother (Silverman, 1992:241), who died in that month; whether
this is true or not is, however, not significant to its meaning in the poem.
The chamber in which the narrator is positioned, is used to signify the
loneliness of the man, and the sorrow he feels for the loss of Lenore. The room
is richly furnished, and reminds the narrator of his lost love, which helps to
create an effect of beauty in the poem. The tempest outside, is used to even
more signify the isolation of this man, to show a sharp contrast between the
calmness in the chamber and the tempestuous night.
The phrase "from out my
heart," Poe claims, is used, in combination with the answer "Nevermore," to let
the narrator realize that he should not try to seek a moral in what has been
previously narrated (Poe, 1850).