Annabel Lee I

This post is going to be part of a series based on the love story of Edgar Allan Poe‘s poem “Annabel Lee.”

It was many and many a year ago,

In a kingdom by the sea,

That a maiden there lived whom you may know

By the name of Annabel Lee;

And this maiden she lived with no other thought

Than to love and be loved by me.

Than to love and be loved by me…

The words roll around in my mind, marbles on a marble floor.

I stand alone on a grassy hill, watching the gray clouds reflected in greenish water.  A storm is coming.  The ocean churns and froths beneath my empty stare, bubbling up like pus from a great wound.  But all I can think about is my heart, lying in the tomb.  Cold, lonely, lost.

My Annabel is gone.

Sweet Annabel Lee, my first, my only love.

I had never loved God or His angels.  Even as a boy I was ever skeptical of the mercy and kindness others painted Him with.  But I have never hated those divinities more than I do at this very moment.

Those jealous seraphs killed my beloved, and God Almighty allowed it to happen.  I feel myself shaking with rage and grief.

Closing my eyes, I think back to the day I met Annabel.

I had been playing at the beach, frolicking gaily at the shore just beyond the reach of the waves.  The sky was vivid lapis lazuli, the breeze, light and sweet.  I do not remember the water being particularly warm, but it was clean and clear, refreshing.  The dry sand sparkled white and the wet sand was soft gold, silky and fine.  Gulls cried, their voices carried across the beach by the breeze, breaking sharply in my ear.  Waves rolled, the low, melodious hiss of the surf soothed the birds’ shrill shrieks.

I was perhaps one and ten years.  By my mother’s accounts, I was a handsome boy.  She loved to run her fingers though my wavy blond hair and tousle it gently.  My skin was barely three shades lighter than honey, but still fair and unmarked.  However, what people first noticed were my eyes.  Large and uncannily bright, they were the deep blue of a summer ocean.

I had just scooped up a handful of sand when a shadow fell over my head.  Annoyed that this new obstacle was blocking the sun’s warmth, I looked up.

Probably appearing rather ridiculous, I shielded my eyes with one sandy arm and squinted, opening my mouth and cocking my head to the left.  What I saw slackened my jaw and made my arm drop like a stone.

A girl about my age stood in front of me.  The waves tugged at her long, pale pink dress, twisting it around her ankles, bits of white foam caught in the hem.  Long dark hair, locks of chestnut laced with amber, danced around a heart-shaped face.  Her magnolia white skin held the faintest flush across her cheekbones.  Lips, the dewy fresh color of roses, slightly parted, revealed pearly white teeth.  Luminescent eyes started down at me.  The incredible green of gemstones, they reminded me of my mother’s emeralds or the exotic lumps of jade she kept locked in a special velvet box.  Dark, curling lashes ringed the eyes and cast shadows down on her face like the silhouette of delicate black lace.

She knelt before me and sat with a grace I hadn’t thought a girl her age capable of.

“May I join you?” She asked, her voice soft and clear as a crystal bell.

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Alexander

So handsome and young

You ride into battle

Fair skin, clear eyes

Curling, wavy, long hair

Student of Aristotle

Your brilliance was blinding

Military, studying

You exceeded all men

Killing animals, hunting

Slaying men without regret

You showed your potential

To rule all the world

Alexander, Alexander

Up on your white house

You lived like a god

But died a mere mortal

Blessed by Athena 

Undefeated in battle

Your arm tireless,

Never ceasing

You lead from the front

Charging into the fray

Unafraid of dark Hades 

You earn the loyalty of men

Vanquishing Persians

Greeks and Indians

None stood against

Your Macedonian might

Son of your mother

Beautiful Olympias

Snake-lover, murderess

Devoted to you

Son of your father

Philip the Second

Olympic Games victor

Dead by Macedonian hand

Conqueror, Pharaoh

Ruler of Persia

Ended the Gordian Knot

With a flick of your knife

You white horse

Bucephalus

Faithful in battle

Dead in India

A city named for him

You married a Persian

The noble Roxana

An attempt to unite

The greatest of empires

Friend of Hephaestion

We you brothers or lovers?

Achilles and Patroclus 

Claimed he was “Alexander too”

Drank the red wine

Worshiping Dion

Until rosy-fingered Eos

Opened bright eyes

Fell ill at a banquet 

Catching fever and sickness

Poison?  The Gods?

You died so soon after

In death, you were beautiful

Still handsome as Endymion

Seemed to only be sleeping

Like Selene’s drowsy beloved

Alexander, Alexander

Who were you my love?

God, mortal, or other?

Still no one knows

Alexander, Alexander

Whatever you are

I’ll be yours forever

Even death can’t us part