This essay will be comparing both of Edgar Allan Poe’s iconic poems of loss and moving on. These poems “The Raven” and “Annabel Lee” both conveyed this message about dead loved ones.But what makes these poems different is how they go about putting off this message. For example “The Raven” likes to use actual repetition of words such as nevermore. While in “Annabel Lee” poe likes to repeat the same theme without actually repeating the same words. Finally these essays are apart of early american literature history these were pioneers of their time by having darker themes and utilizing a mixing of many types of literature we take for granted today.…
Annabel Lee is poem which the author is deeply in love with a maiden name Annabel Lee. Their love for each other is so pure that even an angels in Heaven was jealous of them. Annabel died in such a young age so I felt like he blames a chilling wind at night of her death and she is buried in a tomb by the sea. Even though she died, Poe made it clear that their love for each other can never be broken.Poe described his dreams of Annabel beautiful face and that he lies besides her in her tomb by the kingdom by the sea. He described her beauty by the moon and the stars.…
Through his specific diction, Frederick Douglass is able to exemplify how slavery not only dehumanized slaves, but had an equally horrifying effect on slave owners. When Douglass initially meets Sophie Auld, he describes her as a “pious, warm, and tender-hearted woman” (Douglass 50). Never owning a slave before, Sophie Auld was not accustomed to the typical treatment of slaves, leaving Douglass “utterly astonished at her goodness” (Douglass 46). However, once she is scolded for her kind treatment towards Douglass, most notably for attempting to educate him, by her husband, Douglass describes an extreme change in her character. Douglass uses intense imagery when describing her change, claiming, “that cheerful eye, under the the influence of slavery, soon became red with rage; that voice, made all of sweat accord, changed to one of harsh and horrid discord; and that angelic face gave place to that of a demon” (Douglass 46).…
With insistent meter and captivating rhyme schemes, Edgar Allan Poe's "Annabel Lee" and "The Raven" are both very similar. However, in their views of love, namely the loss and mourning of beautiful women, they differ greatly. Through analysis of the two poems, the reader observes that whom Poe had chosen for a speaker, the tone and the sound effects are all factors in both poems that make two poems with a similar theme contrast.…
For me poetry is usually rather difficult to decipher the real meaning behind the rhyming and sentences that do not really flow with everyday speaking. This poem is an elegy in closed form which encompasses elements such as: alliteration, syntax, diction, rhyme, and has been one of the most parodied poems of all American literature. After much reflection, I believe the way in which Poe intended this poem to be…
There are a few specific lines in the poem that shows a few more parallels between Poe and Virginia’s life and the life of the speaker and Annabel Lee. Poe married his cousin Virginia Clemm at the age twenty-seven while she was thirteen. Even though her age was a little on the young side, where tradition aimed for the woman to be closer to age fifteen, Poe and Virginia experienced true love. However the speaker and Annabel Lee were also very young, “I was a child and she was a child” (Poe 7). Poe’s use of italics gives away the emphasis that he was talking about Virginia and himself. Virginia’s loyalty to Poe is another parallel to the poem. As Velella stated: “and she faithfully followed him from Baltimore to Virginia to New York to Philadelphia back to New York as he sought work” (Velella). The speaker also states: “And this maiden she lived with no other thought than to love and be loved by me” (Poe 5-6). That line alone describes Annabel’s loyalty not only to the speaker but Virginia’s loyalty to Poe. Regardless if Poe didn’t make a lot of money off his writing career Virginia didn’t care she still continued to follow him because she loved him. Her love from him was more than enough of a reason to stay by his side. Poe loved his wife and she loved him and the speaker in Annabel Lee mentions that “we loved with a love that was more than love” (Poe 9). Virginia was Poe’s life, much like Annabel Lee was the…
Poe utilizes the raven as a means of placing a dark tone on his poem when the narrator asks if “[he] shall clasp a sainted maiden whom the angels name Lenore-/ Clasp a rare and radiant maiden whom the angels name Lenore” (94-95). The raven responds with “‘Nevermore’” (96). The widower questions the raven if he will ever get the chance to hold his wife again, and the raven replies that he will not, showing Poe’s tone of despair and misery. On the other hand, Poe creates a hopeful tone in “Annabel Lee” when, at the end of the poem, the narrator says, “And neither the angels in Heaven above/ Nor the demons down under the sea/ Can ever dissever my soul from the soul/ Of the beautiful Annabel Lee” (30-33). Declaring that even death cannot tear him and his love apart, the narrator believes that their souls will forever be together, no matter if she is in Heaven or Hell. This is much unlike “The Raven” in which the widower learns that he will never see his wife again. Poe’s tone in “Annabel Lee” provides a more peaceful atmosphere regarding the death of a loved one than that of “The Raven”. Both poems illustrate the ambiguities and uncertainties that that surround the death of a loved one and offer reactions to such…
Edgar Allan Poe's view on poetry is that all poems must be a creation of beauty. In his eyes, depression and sadness is beautiful. He thinks that the death of a young beautiful woman is itself full of beauty. Poe’s way of beauty is a one of a kind compared to other poets and writers. In both "Annabel Lee" and "The Raven", Poe writes about this so-called beauty.…
The purpose of the first stanza is to paint a picture of scene where the poem is taking place. It starts off like a fairy tale, telling the audience that the story we are about to hear occurred “many a year ago” in a “kingdom by the sea” (Poe1-2). Poe uses repetition to remind his audience of the location in the second line of every stanza because these minute details are significant because the sea and the kingdom are the major images of the poem and it creates a sort of hypnotizing effect on the reader, which Poe is synonymous for. In the next two lines he introduces the main character by the name of Annabel Lee. He calls her a maiden, inferring that she is fairly young and presumably attractive, and it also keeps with the general tone of the poem. In the next two lines Poe reveals his purpose for writing the poem, which is that him and Annabel Lee were deeply and passionately in love, so much so that all they could think about day to day was each other.…
In the essay “Mother Tongue” by Amy Tan (1990), which discusses her mother’s way of speaking through “broken English”, Tan explores the different “Englishes” that she has come into contact with in her everyday life; these variations have presented struggles in her mother’s life. Tan illustrates this to her audience by giving examples of the struggles her mother was faced with due to “her” English and the many versions of English that surrounds Tan. Tan examines the different versions of English people use in order to make the reader realize that English takes many different forms which leads to difficulty and confusion to those who are attempting to learn and speak the language like her mother. This work of literature is directed towards those who do not have an understanding of the variations of languages and the complications that come along with trying to learn a new language like English.…
While Virginia was suffering in the other room, Poe wrote The Raven. A poem about dealing with the loss of a loved one, and the insanity of grief that comes with it. He was pretty much preparing himself for a life without her, and how he was going to live with himself. Eventually, she passed, and it drove him to start drinking more and more. A poem called Annabel Lee is written after she died and it is about the death of a beautiful woman, Virginia.…
Poe is famous for his recurring themes of death and beauty, “Lenore” is no different. With his classic style, a young, beautiful and recently deceased young lady. Lenore takes place through the unknown narrator. The dead Lenore is seen through the eyes of her alive male lover. He finds solace in the pinnacle of his grief with her beauty even in death. Lenore is noted to be a beautiful person both externally and internally.…
Poe’s life influenced Annabel Lee a lot by making it sad and dark. The reason it was sad and dark is because of his life and how it changed forever when he lost or started losing his wife Virginia Clemm (cousin) and her mother. As well as his brother and his original mother later on, but mainly because he lost his wife and his beloved cousin, Virginia Clemm.…
Poe explains how Maria Clemm was his true mother figure. He says that Maria is the mother of his lover Virginia and therefore is dearer to him than his true mother. This poem is another great representation of how women dying relates to both his real life and his writing. This poem is Poe’s way of coping with the loss of Maria Clemm, and to him was his mother figure who he deeply…
Poe's vision of the feminine ideal appears throughout his work, in his poetry and short stories, and his critical essays, most notably “The Philosophy of Composition. ” Especially in his poetry, he idealizes the vulnerability of woman, a portrayal that extends into his fiction in stories such as “Eleonora” and “The Fall of the House of Usher. ” In these tales, and even moreso in “Morella” and “Ligeia, ” the heroines' unexpected capacities for life beyond the grave indicate that females may have more strength and initiative than the delicate models of his verse. The most significant trait of his ideal, however, is her role as emotional catalyst for her partner. The romanticized woman is much more significant in her impact on Poe's narrators than in her own right.…