Rhetorical Devices In Annabel Lee

471 Words1 Page

Edgar Allen Poe’s “Annabel Lee” is a sweet sounding ballad that deals with the major theme of a love struck individual who mourns for the lost of his loved one, Annabel Lee. The 173617 line poem idealizes Annabel Lee as a young and pure maiden that shared a passionate love with the speaker of the poem. The poem shifts through the speaker of the poems stages of grief as he blames the Angels for the death of his loved one.
The first major rhetorical device that we encounter in the story is an anaphora. In line 2 of the poem we encounter the phrase “a kingdom by the sea”and later on we witness that it is used in many other stanzas. Throughout the poem, Edgar Allan Poe also uses imagery to help the readers see, feel and appreciate the love and married …show more content…

Throughout the beginning of the poem, Poe uses warm diction to expose us to a warm feeling that denotes and admires the love of two individuals.The diction of the poem also reinforces the speaker's argument. By addressing Annabel Lee as a "maiden" in lines three and five rather than simply as a "woman," he draws images of purity and innocence to the reader's minds. In the 3 stanza of the poem, Poe uses personification to describe the wind. He writes "The wind came out of the cloud by night, chilling and killing my Annabel Lee." Because the moon cannot actually kill a person, this is an example of personification. In line 17, the kinsman is the main symbol of the interference of older people in the speaker's life. The speaker seems convinced that other people don't understand him and his lover, Annabel

Open Document