Luke Havergal And Annabel Lee Literary Analysis

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The poems Luke Havergal by Edwin Arlington Robinson and Annabel Lee by Edgar Allan Poe have many features in common. They both discuss the topic of grief, they tell of a lost lover, feature a grieving man, and, depending on one’s reading, address the topic of suicide. However, there are also places where they differ, especially in the presentation of the topics and subjects. These difference affect how the reader interacts with the poem and the emotions shared by the poet and the speaker. Especially, the differences in how the structure and images of the poems affect how they convey their individual stories.
Structure is an important part of poetry. Structure, or lack thereof, is the framework that the poet uses to support his words and …show more content…

The speaker begins by sharing how idyllic his life was with his wife, when they lived in the “kingdom by the sea” (2). In the second stanza, he says they were children but that “they loved with a love that was more than love” (9). However, it is also in the second stanza that the speaker tells us that their life did not stay idyllic and happy, for the “wingéd seraphs of Heaven//coveted” his wife (11-12). The speaker says in the third stanza that a “wind blew out of a cloud, chilling” his wife, or killing her. Wind is an image of change, possibly because of its chaotic and unpredictable nature. Cold is a death image because it inadvertently killed many people. It is interesting, though to have both of these tactile images together to describe the death of Annabel Lee. The speaker continues to repeat many of these points over again, a bit differently each time. That is, until the reader comes to the last …show more content…

In Luke Havergal, there are two main readings that people adhere to. The first is that the speaker is a spirit who has come to encourage Havergal to commit suicide so that Havergal can be with his lover. The second reading is that this spirit has come to encourage Havergal to face death, but not to actually commit self-slaughter. This seems like a good reading, seeing all of the death imagery and the way it is conveyed. Others might argue that the speaker is telling Havergal to cool his passion and wait for death, but I believe that the other reading fits better with the tone of the

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