The expression that is repeated all throughout the poem is the word nevermore joined with various expressions depending on every stanza. This word can have endless connotation, in any case what Poe is trying to demonstrate is that his loved one is lost always, to never return. This takes readers back to the thesis, about how passing will always affect them, using of the word nevermore you specifically connect it to perpetually, its opposite. Consequently, in the event that readers will never see any of their loved ones that they are left with a sorrow for eternity. So regardless of the possibility that it doesn't appear as self-evident, the psychotic, suspenseful, and morbid tone Poe has utilized as a part of expressing "The Raven", has demonstrated that the distress the passing of a friend or family member brings will remain with you for …show more content…
This appears like an abnormal mix of words, doesn't it? However, it is this tone that has made The Raven such a captivating poem for many years. In spite of the fact that you would need to read the whole poem to completely understand the impact of the tone, here are a few lines that best express it: "But the raven, sitting lonely on the placid bust, spoke only, That one word, as if his soul in that one word he did outpour. Nothing further then when he said “ not a feather then he fluttered -Till I scarcely more than muttered `Other friends have flown before “ On the morrow he will leave me, as my hopes have flown before. Then the bird said, `Nevermore". The discussion about death and the morrow, and the talking to the bird, and the chilling utilization of the words draw out the psychotic, suspenseful, and morbid tone. This demonstrates how the distress the passing of a friend or family member will remain with you until the end of time. Sorrow can be related with despair, yet an unceasing sadness can be related with madness, thus the psychotic tone. On the more evident note, the morbidness is associated with the demise and this man that has lost his loved one, and a bird has come to haunt him, and it won't leave, sort of like the sorrow that won't