Edgar Allen Poe's use of imagery through out the poem "Annabel Lee" is highly perceivable. His strong use of images can guide you right through this poem.
This particular poem starts off with a man looking back on his life as a child, falling in love with the girl of his dreams. Right here the rhythm of the poem is set at a very even pace. Poe writes about "a kingdom by the sea," meaning how happy the speaker is and how perfect his life is with the girl. The speaker in this poem is a man who is madly in love. One can easily picture a beautiful castle by the ocean as two children are falling in love, but if you look deeper you can see that "a kingdom by the sea" really means the state of love that the boy was in (lines 23 and 24). He also says that Annabel Lee lived with no other thought "than to love and be loved by me." This means that he was saying that she lived for him and he lived for her. By this I mean that the two of them were placed on this earth solely for the benefit of each other. With out sharing love between the two, neither of them could exist.
Clearly the age if the bride did not matter since she was extremely young. Picture two children laughing, playing and having so much fun with each other that they immediately fall in love, as children. When they married she was only about twelve or thirteen. He also said that the angels themselves were jealous of the relationship if him and Annabel Lee. He felt that the angels were not happy, because of the envy for the love that they shared for each other. He says, "the winged seraph's of heaven coveted her and me." A seraph is a fiery angel who protects Gods throne. In a way he was saying his love was more perfect than Gods.
When Annabel Lee dies you can see her highborn kinsman or "angels", come down and carry her away from him. Then she was placed in a sepulchre. A sepulchre is a tomb that is very similar to the shrines devoted to the Gods of Mount Olympus.