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There is a slight indication that the narrator dreamt/imagined the entire scenario in "The Raven." This is because after the stanzas you see the words that always imply that there is "nothing more," Meaning that maybe somewhere, deep in his conscious, he knew no one was going to be at the door and that he was going to be greeted only by darkness.
- The "Raven" narrator can be dreaming because he is dozing at midnight and is physically and mentally tired. But he needs to be awake.
- Because he is an objective first-person narrator who tells his story after it happens, so he will have to wake up and realize that it was a dream.
- His memory of it will fade, but it's not. After all, the crow is still in his room, so it has to be real.
- He may be prone to hallucinations. In the first verse, the narrator describes himself as "weak and tired" and "almost taking a nap" just before the crow arrives.
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