Respuesta :

The mood of lines is Melancholy menace.

The sounds of the bells appear to be a menace, frightening, and dangerous in Edgar Allan Poe's poem "The Bells," which causes the author to become extremely frightened. Furthermore, because he feels depressed when they sound in the middle of the night, that sound is likewise seen as gloomy.

Poe connects several bell kinds with the emotions they cause him to experience in his poem "The Bells." He begins by describing the joyful sleds' glittering bells. He continues with the wedding bells, which are brilliant and convey tranquil joy. But when Poe inserts the brash alarm bells that scream in the night and inspire dread and rage, the tone changes. Last but not least, the iron bells convey grief, agony, and death with melancholy. Line 75, "At the melancholy menace of their tone," best captures this.

To learn more about melancholy refer the link:

https://brainly.com/question/5335868

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Universidad de Mexico