According to Butler, it is the revival of a cherished one, signifying “that the romantic idealist may, mad though he be, finally achieve some success in his quest for a higher meaning” (Butler 4). Therefore, Butler explains how the possibility of one’s own reincarnation may lead to the narrator’s realization of his freedom which is given to him by his everlasting love, Eleonora. In the beginning of Poe’s short story, the narrator was not in love with Eleonora as he stated, “hand in hand about this valley, for fifteen years, roamed I with Eleonora before Love entered within our hearts” (Poe, par. 7). As soon as he falls in love with his cousin, he begins describing her as the most beautiful woman in the whole entire world and compares her to an angel symbolizing compassion and purity. Later throughout the story, Eleonora dies, leaving the narrator with lament and was left alone in the valley that becomes quite the opposite of “many-colored grass.” The narrator becomes fatigued by all the melancholy and relocated himself to a neighboring royal city where he establishes himself in court and loses himself to decadence (Chambers, par. 8) He is taken with a courtly lady, Ermengarde, and falls in love again. He marries her and says, “What, indeed, was my passion for the young girl of the valley in comparison with the fervor, …show more content…
The story describes Eleonora as an idyllic woman in a mystical, surreal atmosphere which later withers as she dies, leaving the narrator to hang on to her memory. However, as time passes by her memory and details fade away. Edgar Allan Poe successfully wrote this piece of literature because Eleonora’s charming character was communicated throughout the story. It also demonstrated the audience how one eventually forgets a loved one as the image of that person becomes