Edgar Allan Poe, (born January 19, 1809, Boston,Massachusetts, U.S.—died October
7, 1849, Baltimore,Maryland), American
short-story writer, poet, critic, and editor who is famous for his cultivation
of mystery and the macabre. His tale The
Murders in the Rue Morgue (1841) initiated the modern detective
story, and the atmosphere in his tales of horror is unrivaled in American
fiction. His “The Raven”
(1845) numbers among the best-known poems in the national literature.
Life
Poe was the son of the
English-born actress Elizabeth Arnold Poe and David Poe, Jr., an actor from
Baltimore. After his mother died in Richmond, Virginia,
in 1811, he was taken into the home of John Allan, a Richmond merchant
(presumably his godfather), and of his childless wife. He was later taken to
Scotland and England (1815–20), where he was given a classical educationthat
was continued in Richmond. For 11 months in 1826 he attended the University
of Virginia, but his gambling losses at the university so incensed his
guardian that he refused to let him continue, and Poe returned to Richmond to
find his sweetheart, (Sarah) Elmira Royster, engaged. He went to Boston, where
in 1827 he published a pamphlet of youthful Byronic poems,Tamerlane,
and Other Poems. Poverty forced him to join the army under the name of Edgar A.
Perry, but, on the death of Poe’s foster mother, John Allan purchased his
release from the army and helped him get an appointment to the U.S. Military
Academy at West Point. Before going, Poe published a new volume at Baltimore, Al
Aaraaf, Tamerlane, and Minor Poems (1829). He successfully sought
expulsion from the academy, where he was absent from all drills and classes for
a week. He proceeded to New York City and brought out a volume of Poems,
containing several masterpieces, some showing the influence of John Keats, Percy
Bysshe Shelley, andSamuel
Taylor Coleridge. He then returned to Baltimore, where he began to write
stories. In 1833 his MS. Found in a Bottle won $50 from a Baltimore
weekly, and by 1835 he was in Richmond as editor of the Southern Literary
Messenger. There he made a name as a critical reviewer and married his young
cousin Virginia Clemm, who was only 13. Poe seems to have been an affectionate
husband and son-in-law.
Poe was dismissed from
his job in Richmond, apparently for drinking, and went to New York City.
Drinking was in fact to be the bane of his life. To talk well in a large
company he needed a slight stimulant, but a glass of sherry might start him on
a spree; and, although he rarely succumbed to intoxication, he was often seen
in public when he did. This gave rise to the conjecture that Poe was a drug
addict, but according to medical testimony he had a brain lesion. While in New
York City in 1838 he published a long prose narrative, The
Narrative of Arthur Gordon Pym, combining (as so often in his tales) much
factual material with the wildest fancies. It is considered one inspiration of
Herman Melville’s Moby Dick. In 1839 he became coeditor of Burton’s
Gentleman’s Magazine in Philadelphia.
There a contract for a monthly feature stimulated him to writeWilliam Wilson and The
Fall of the House of Usher, stories of supernatural horror. The latter
contains a study of a neurotic now known to have been an acquaintance of Poe,
not Poe himself.
Later in 1839 Poe’s Tales
of the Grotesque and Arabesque appeared (dated 1840). He resigned from Burton’s about
June 1840 but returned in 1841 to edit its successor, Graham’s Lady’s and
Gentleman’s Magazine, in which he printed the first detective
story, The
Murders in the Rue Morgue. In 1843 his The Gold-Bug won a
prize of $100 from the Philadelphia Dollar Newspaper, which gave him great
publicity. In 1844 he returned to New York, wrote The Balloon-Hoax for
the Sun, and became subeditor of the New York Mirror under N.P.
Willis, thereafter a lifelong friend. In the New York Mirror of
January 29, 1845, appeared, from advance sheets of theAmerican Review, his most
famous poem, “The Raven,”
which gave him national fame at once. Poe then became editor of the Broadway
Journal, a short-lived weekly, in which he republished most of his short
stories, in 1845. During this last year the now-forgotten poet Frances Sargent
Locke Osgood pursued Poe. Virginia did not object, but “Fanny’s” indiscreet
writings about her literary love caused great scandal. His The Raven and
Other Poems and a selection of his Talescame out in 1845, and in 1846
Poe moved to a cottage at Fordham (now part of New York City), where he wrote
for Godey’s Lady’s Book (May–October 1846) “The Literati of New York
City”—gossipy sketches on personalities of the day, which led to a libel suit.
Poe’s wife, Virginia,
died in January 1847. The following year he went to Providence,
Rhode Island, to woo Sarah Helen Whitman, a poet. There was a brief engagement.
Poe had close but platonic entanglements with Annie Richmond and with Sarah
Anna Lewis, who helped him financially. He composed poetic tributes to all of
them. In 1848 he also published the lecture“Eureka,” a
transcendental “explanation” of the universe, which has been hailed as a
masterpiece by some critics and as nonsense by others. In 1849 he went south,
had a wild spree in Philadelphia, but got safely to Richmond, where he finally
became engaged to Elmira Royster, by then the widowed Mrs. Shelton, and spent a
happy summer with only one or two relapses. He enjoyed the companionship of
childhood friends and an unromantic friendship with a young poet, Susan Archer
Talley.
Poe had some
forebodings of death when he left Richmond for Baltimore late in September.
There he died, although whether from drinking, heart failure, or other causes
was still uncertain in the 21st century. He was buried in Westminster
Presbyterian churchyard in Baltimore.
Appraisal
Poe’s work owes much to
the concern of Romanticism with
the occult and the satanic. It owes much also to his own feverish dreams, to
which he applied a rare faculty of shaping plausible fabrics out of impalpable
materials. With an air of objectivity and spontaneity, his productions are
closely dependent on his own powers of imagination and an elaborate technique.
His keen and sound judgment as an appraiser of contemporary literature, his
idealism and musical gift as a poet, his dramatic art as a storyteller,
considerably appreciated in his lifetime, secured him a prominent place among
universally known men of letters.
The outstanding fact in
Poe’s character is a strange duality. The wide divergence of contemporary
judgments on the man seems almost to point to the coexistence of two persons in
him. With those he loved he was gentle and devoted. Others, who were the butt
of his sharp criticism, found him irritable and self-centred and went so far as
to accuse him of lack of principle. Was it, it has been asked, a double of the
man rising from harrowing nightmares or from the haggard inner vision of dark
crimes or from appalling graveyard fantasies that loomed in Poe’s unstable
being?
Much of Poe’s best work
is concerned with terror and sadness, but in ordinary circumstances the poet
was a pleasant companion. He talked brilliantly, chiefly of literature, and
read his ownpoetry and
that of others in a voice of surpassing beauty. He admired Shakespeare and
Alexander Pope. He had a sense of humour, apologizing to a visitor for not
keeping a pet raven. If the mind of Poe is considered, the duality is still
more striking. On one side, he was an idealist and a visionary. His yearning
for the ideal was both of the heart and of the imagination. His sensitivity to
the beauty and sweetness of women inspired his most touching lyrics (“To
Helen,” “Annabel
Lee,” “Eulalie,” “To One in Paradise”) and the full-toned prose hymns to
beauty and love in “Ligeia” and “Eleonora.” In “Israfel” his imagination
carried him away from the material world into a dreamland. This Pythian mood
was especially characteristic of the later years of his life.
More generally, in such
verses as “The Valley of Unrest,” “Lenore,” “The Raven,” “For Annie,” and “Ulalume”
and in his prose tales, his familiar mode of evasion from the universe of
common experience was through eerie thoughts, impulses, or fears. From these
materials he drew the startling effects of his tales of death (The
Fall of the House of Usher, The
Masque of the Red Death, The Facts in the Case of M. Valdemar, The
Premature Burial, The Oval Portrait, Shadow), his tales of
wickedness and crime (Berenice, The
Black Cat, William Wilson, The Imp of the Perverse, The
Cask of Amontillado, The
Tell-Tale Heart), his tales of survival after dissolution (Ligeia, Morella, Metzengerstein),
and his tales of fatality (The Assignation, The Man of the Crowd). Even
when he does not hurl his characters into the clutch of mysterious forces or
onto the untrodden paths of the beyond, he uses the anguish of imminent death
as the means of causing the nerves to quiver (The
Pit and the Pendulum), and his grotesque invention deals with corpses and
decay in an uncanny play with the aftermath of death.
On the other side, Poe
is conspicuous for a close observation of minute details, as in the long
narratives and in many of the descriptions that introduce the tales or
constitute their settings. Closely connected with this is his power of
ratiocination. He prided himself on his logic and carefully handled this real
accomplishment so as to impress the public with his possessing still more of it
than he had; hence the would-be feats of thought reading, problem unraveling,
andcryptography that
he attributed to his Legrand and Dupin. This suggested to him the analytical
tales, which created the detective story, and his science
fiction tales.
The same duality is
evinced in his art. He was capable of writing angelic or weird poetry, with a
supreme sense of rhythm and word appeal, or prose of sumptuous beauty and
suggestiveness, with the apparent abandon of compelling inspiration; yet he
would write down a problem of morbid psychology or the outlines of an
unrelenting plot in a hard and dry style. In Poe’s masterpieces the double
contents of his temper, of his mind, and of his art are fused into a oneness of
tone, structure, and movement, the more effective, perhaps, as it is compounded
of various elements.
As a critic, Poe laid
great stress upon correctness of language, metre, and structure. He formulated
rules for the short story,
in which he sought the ancient unities:
i.e., the short story should relate a complete action and take place within one
day in one place. To these unities he added that of mood or effect. He was not
extreme in these views, however. He praised longer works and sometimes thought
allegories and morals admirable if not crudely presented. Poe admired
originality, often in work very different from his own, and was sometimes an
unexpectedly generous critic of decidedly minor writers.
Poe’s genius was early
recognized abroad. No one did more to persuade the world and, in the long run,
the United States, of Poe’s greatness than the French poets Charles
Baudelaire andStéphane
Mallarmé. Indeed his role in French literature was that of a poetic master
model and guide to criticism. French Symbolism relied
on his “The Philosophy of Composition,” borrowed from his imagery, and used his
examples to generate the modern theory of “pure poetry.”

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