Respuesta :
Answer:
"Annabel Lee and "Remember" comparison and contrast, with the structures supporting the meaning of each poem, and including one stave from each poem to support the answer.
Explanation:
The poem "Annabel Lee" by Edgar Allan Poe and "Remember" by Christina Rosseti are both poems talking about the contemplative and reconciliatory attitude towards the death of a beloved, expressed in a sad and dark mood.
The "Annable Lee"´s lines could be considered a ballad stanza form or a narrative poem to be recited or sung as the representation of the most pure form love, drawing a picture of eternal love, including elements in nature to state the innevitable separation between them as the sea, a looming, ominous presence symbolizing loneliness, coldness, and emptiness.
“Remember” is considered to be an iambic pentameter petrarchan sonnet whose tone changes with the break between the octave and the sestet, that brings a change in attitude, when the narrator gives up the need to be remembered, setting an irony as the poem´s name is “Remember” but, wishing her beloved happiness, even though he forgets her, as an expression of true love, using repetition to state the deepness between life and death, expressed with word like “gone away”, “gone far away”, “silent land” rather than using elements in nature, symbolizing the narrator's loneliness and emptiness without her beloved.
"Annabel Lee" by Edgar Allan Poe
A wind blew out of a cloud, chilling
My beautiful Annabel Lee;
So that her highborn kinsmen came
And bore her away from me,
To shut her up in a sepulchre
In this kingdom by the sea.
Annabel Lee dies of frostbite on a cold night, and is put in a sepulchre, or tomb, which doesn't stop him from loving her.
"Remember" by Christina Rosseti
Remember me when I am gone away,
Gone far away into the silent land;
When you can no more hold me by the hand
Four words in this poem are used many times at the end of lines in this poem: me, we, sea, and Lee, other frequent rhyme words are "love" and "know", "chilling and killing" and "rise ... eyes". All these rhymes add a hypnotic quality to the poem.