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What are the subjects of the first two sections of the poem "The Bells" by Edgar Allan Poe? How are they connected? Cite evidence to explain your insights

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Answered by ahmedareeb67411
1

Answer:

Kannada 8th English bible and English translation 6

Answered by davnit7640
7

Answer:

In the simplest analysis, each stanza of "The Bells" deals with a particular type of bell and seeks to establish a specific mood. Poe associates the silver sledge bells with merriment and excitement, while the golden wedding bells are a celebration and a promise of joy. Then, with the next two sections come some far more ominous emotions, as the "brazen" alarm bells create an atmosphere of horror, and the iron bells toll to announce the coming of death. Silver and gold are the more valuable metals, and consequently Poe associates them with the happier stanzas. The presence of these four distinct scenarios make "The Bells" somewhat different from Poe's typical writing, which often seeks to establish a single mood in accordance with his aesthetic theories of unity, which he developed in a number of his essays on art and writing.

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