Paper About Annabel Lee and The Raven by Edgar Allen Poe The two sonnets express the pains of speakers who have lost their loves, talk about the likenesses and contrasts in the techniques for these sonnets and the thoughts they recommend. Both 'The Raven' and 'Annabel Lee' manage the speaker's recollections of a friend or family member and both, maybe fundamentally as a result of their topic, uncover a fixation on death. Poe, to a limited degree, utilizes comparative techniques in the two sonnets but then the tone and mind-set of every sonnet is somewhat extraordinary, and, this paper will contend, the impact on the peruser is distinctive too. The two sonnets utilize the extremely basic strategy of redundancy – the two expressions and words. This redundancy is so dexterously utilized by Poe that the impact isn't repetitive yet assists with making the sonnet paramount and furthermore recommends his fixation on his lost love.