The man in Edgar Allen Poe’s “The Raven” is hallucinating his entire conversation with the raven, however does that make him mentally ill or insane? Yes. This man is grieving the loss of his beloved Lenore, however is experiencing grief more than a normal person would. In the poem, a man is visited by a raven and converses with said raven about the loss of his loved one. The man is convinced that the raven is there as a sign that Lenore may not be in such a happy place. As previously stated, the man is simply grieving his loss, his behaviors line up very closely with Elisabeth Kübler-Ross’ five stages of grief. In the beginning of the poem the man is by himself in his chamber. Stage one of grieving is denial/isolation,
The man in Edgar Allen Poe’s “The Raven” is hallucinating his entire conversation with the raven, however does that make him mentally ill or insane? Yes. This man is grieving the loss of his beloved Lenore, however is experiencing grief more than a normal person would. In the poem, a man is visited by a raven and converses with said raven about the loss of his loved one. The man is convinced that the raven is there as a sign that Lenore may not be in such a happy place. As previously stated, the man is simply grieving his loss, his behaviors line up very closely with Elisabeth Kübler-Ross’ five stages of grief. In the beginning of the poem the man is by himself in his chamber. Stage one of grieving is denial/isolation,