preview

Essay about Edgar Allen Poe’s Annabel Lee: Never a Happily Ever After

Decent Essays

Fairy tales are usually associated with elegant dresses, fancy shoes, and a happily ever after for the protagonists, presenting the tale itself as if it is too good to be true, because it is. In reality people cannot have a fairy tale ending because the majority of the population has difficulty paying bills, providing for their families, and, in many cases, relationships fail. Edgar Allen Poe’s “Annabel Lee” shows readers exactly that: All Fairy Tales must be brought to an end and there is nothing that can stop this. Within the first two stanzas of Poe’s “Annabel Lee” the speaker emphasizes the fairy tale era of the speakers relationship with Annabel Lee. In stanza one Poe uses many poetic elements to differentiate between reality and …show more content…

At the end of the second stanza the speaker says that “With a love that the winged seraphs in Heaven/ Coveted her and me.” This statement shows that their love was great enough to cause the highest angles to commit a sin and covet their love, creating the idea of the perfect fairy tale. Through the fourth stanza Poe helps the speaker demonstrate the fact that all fairy tales must end by personifying the wind. “A wind blew out of a cloud by night,/Chilling and killing my Annabel Lee.” By making the wind slaughter Annabel Lee like a serial killer, the speaker shows that Annabel Lee dies and he places the blame on something that will always be and can never be stopped by any science or living being. Also within stanza four, Poe uses consonance to emphasize the death of Annabel Lee and how their fairy tale love story came to an abrupt ending. “That the wind came out of the cloud by night,/Chilling and killing my Annabel Lee.” By emphasizing the lone “L” sound in

Get Access