Eldorado
A Poem by Edgar Allan Poe (1809-1849)
A Study Guide
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Type of Work
Date of Publication
Theme
The Knight
Eldorado: Kingdom of Gold
Atmosphere
Author Information
Text With Notes
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Notes and Annotation by Michael J. Cummings..© 2006
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Type of Work and Date of Publication

"Eldorado" is a four-stanza poem published for the first time on April 21, 1849, in Flag of Our Union

Theme 

Life is a journey on which people search for wealth, fame, joy, courage, approval, adventure, acceptance, God, a solution to a complex problem, and so on. However, no one ever reaches his goal. If an entrepreneur makes $1 million or $10 million, he then wants to make $100 million. If a scientist reconciles quantum mechanics with Einsteinian relativity, he then wants to prove the superstring theory. If a mystic finds a reflection of God in a sunset or the smile of a leper, he then wants to search creation further for another revelation. After Alexander the Great conquered half the world on his march from Greece to India, legend says he sat down and cried, for he had no more worlds to conquer. He wanted the adventure to continue. Man is meant to seek. If he finds, he dies. So, like the knight in the poem, he must “ride, boldly ride." 

Who Is the Knight? 

The knight represents everyone who travels the journey of life. 

Eldorado: Kingdom of Gold

Eldorado (or El Dorado) is Spanish for “the gilded one." Spanish explorers coined the term in the early 1500's to refer to a legendary South American tribal chief in northern South America. According to tales the Spaniards heard, this ruler presided over a kingdom rich in gold and precious gems. It was said that he covered his body with gold dust during festivals, then later washed it off in a lake.  The “golden city" in which he was believed to reside was called Omagua (or Omoa). As time passed, the kingdom itself came to be called Eldorado, and explorers from Spain, Portugal, Germany, and England searched northern reaches of the continent to find the kingdom and its fabulous treasures.  None of the expeditions succeeded. Subsequently, Eldorado was used to refer to any place or any enterprise promising to yield wealth or opportunity.
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Atmosphere

The atmosphere of "Eldorado" is upbeat and cheerful in Stanza 1 as the knight, singing a song, continues his quest for Eldorado. But the poem turns somber and melancholy in the succeeding stanzas. No longer is there sunshine, only shadow. And, as he grows old, the knight despairs of every finding Eldorado. Then the mysterious pilgrim shadow tells him to ride on to the Valley of the Shadow, which appears to be the biblical "valley of the shadow of death." (See Notes and Comments accompanying the poem, below.) The surreal, dreamlike atmosphere of the final stanza may represent the knight's transition from life to death.

Author Information

Edgar Allan Poe was born on January 19, 1809, in Boston. After being orphaned at age two, he was taken into the home of a childless couple–John Allan, a successful businessman in Richmond, Va., and his wife. Allan was believed to be Poe’s godfather. At age six, Poe went to England with the Allans and was enrolled in schools there. After he returned with the Allans to the U.S. in 1820, he studied at private schools, then attended the University of Virginia and the U.S. Military Academy, but did not complete studies at either school. After beginning his literary career as a poet and prose writer, he married his young cousin, Virginia Clemm. He worked for several magazines and joined the staff of the New York Mirror newspaper in 1844. All the while, he was battling a drinking problem. After the Mirror published his poem “The Raven" in January 1845, Poe achieved national and international fame. Besides pioneering the development of the short story, Poe invented the format for the detective story as we know it today. He also was an outstanding literary critic. Despite the acclaim he received, he was never really happy because of his drinking and because of the deaths of several people close to him, including his wife in 1847. He frequently had trouble paying his debts. It is believed that heavy drinking was a contributing cause of his death in Baltimore on October 7, 1849. 

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Eldorado
By Edgar Allan Poe
Published in April of 1849
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Text of the Poem Notes
1  
Gaily bedight,
A gallant knight,
In sunshine and in shadow,  
Had journeyed long,
Singing a song,
In search of Eldorado

2
But he grew old ––
This knight so bold ––
And o'er his heart a shadow
Fell as he found  fell, found
No spot of ground
That looked like Eldorado.  

3
And, as his strength
Failed him at length,
He met a pilgrim shadow –– 
"Shadow" said he,
"Where can it be ––  
This land of Eldorado?" 

4
"Over the Mountains
Of the Moon,
Down the Valley of the Shadow,
Ride, boldly ride,"
The shade replied, ––
"If you seek for Eldorado!"

bedight: arrayed; dressed
G,g: alliteration
sh,sh: alliteration
S, s, s: alliteration
Eldorado: (see above)

shadow: metaphor for discouragement, dejection, or melancholy. Note that the knight rides in sunshine and in shadow in Stanza 1. In Stanza 2, as he grows old, the shadow overtakes him. In Stanza 3, the shadow is personified as the motivation that drives him on or as death beckoning him. In Stanza 4, the Shadow becomes the place the knight seeks. Only in death will the knight reach his goal and end his quest.  
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F, f, f, f: alliteration.
l, l: alliteration
spot: perhaps a gold nugget, gem, or another sign of Eldorado
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pilgrim shadow: shadow of a traveler. Thus, the pilgrim shadow may be the knight's own inner self (ambition, motivation) in the form of an apparition driving him on in spite of his weariness. One may also interpret it as death overtaking the knight. .
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Valley . . . Shadow: These words echo the phrase valley of the shadow of death in Verse 1, Chapter 23, of the Book of Psalms in the Old Testament of the Bible. 
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shade: reference to the pilgrim shadow. Shade is another word for apparition or ghost. But unlike ghost, wraith, phantom, spirit, or any other word for apparition, shade maintains the sh sound of shadow, thus keeping up the rhythm and musicality of the poem..
 

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