"It was many and many a year ago, / In a kingdom by the sea." Poe's "Annabel Lee" is his last poem — published after his death in 1849. It's a ballad of love, loss, and obsession. The speaker's love for Annabel Lee was so intense that "the angels, not half so happy in heaven, / Went envying her and me" — and killed her. Or so he believes.
Biographical Context: Poe and Loss
Poe lost his wife Virginia to tuberculosis in 1847. She was 24. "Annabel Lee" is often read as his elegy for her. Whether the poem is "about" Virginia or a fictional figure, the grief is real. Poe died two years after Virginia — broken, alcoholic, alone.
Key Literary Devices
Repetition: "In a kingdom by the sea" — the refrain anchors the poem. "Annabel Lee" — her name repeats like a incantation, a spell to keep her present.
Rhythm: The poem has a ballad-like quality — musical, hypnotic. Poe was a master of sound. The rhythm creates a dreamlike, almost obsessive state.
Symbolism: The sea = eternity, the unconscious, the place where the speaker visits Annabel Lee's tomb. The angels = jealousy, cruelty. The speaker blames heaven for his loss.
The Meaning: Love That Outlives Death
The speaker claims his soul and Annabel Lee's are still entwined — "In her tomb by the sounding sea." He lies by her side every night. The poem doesn't resolve into acceptance. It circles. The love is obsessive, undying. Poe gives grief a voice that won't let go.
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