Edgar Allan Poe Biography
Edgar Allan Poe Facts
Born
in Boston, USA, Edgar Allan Poe occupies a distinct place as a renowned
American Short Story Writer, Poet, Critic, Book Reviewer and an Editor. Edgar
Allan Poe was born as the son of the English-born actress Elizabeth Arnold Poe
and David Poe, Jr., an actor from Baltimore on Jan. 19, 1809. His father was
irresponsible, rash, impetuous and addicted to drinking. Shortly after his
birth his father disappeared and his mother died on December 8, 1811, leaving
three children orphans, when Poe was just two years of age.
The
children were adopted by various families. Edgar was taken into the home of
John Allan, a wealthy tobacco merchant in Richmond at his wife's request and
gave him the middle name Allan as a baptismal name, though he never formally
adopted him. Allan never treated Poe with sensitivity.
He
was later taken to Scotland and England (1815-20), where he was given a
classical education that was continued in Richmond. The gothic architecture and
historical landscape of the region made a deep Imprint on his youthful
imagination, affected his adult writings.
The
Allans left England in June 1820 and arrived in Richmond on August. Here, Poe
entered the English and Classical School of Joseph H. Clarke, a graduate of
Trinity College in Dublin.
On
February 14, 1826, Poe (then 17) entered the University of Virginia, taking
classes in Latin, Greek, French, Spanish, and Italian. Though he spent more
time gambling and drinking than studying and often arrived to class unprepared,
he won top honors in French and Latin.
Poe returned to Richmond to find his sweetheart Sarah
Elmira Royster, whom he had met and fallen in love with before going to
Virginia, engaged.
Poverty
forced him to join the army. On May 26, 1827, Poe enlisted in the US Army under
the name Edgar A. Perry. He joined Battery Hof the 1st Artillery, then
stationed at Fort Independence.
In
1833 his story ‘MS.Found in a Bottle' won $50 from The Baltimore Visitor. And
in 1834 Alan died without mentioning Poe in his will. In 1835, Thomas Willis
White hired him as an editor at the Southern Literary Messenger, in which he
published short stories, poems, and literary reviews under his direction. The
publication thrived under his direction. There he made a name as a critical
reviewer and felt financially secure to marry his young cousin Virgina Eliza Clemm, who was only 13.
Poe
seems to have been an affectionate husband and son-in-law. But later alcoholism.
In fact, Poe seems to have suffered from a physical ailment that rendered him
so sensitive to alchohol that a single drink could induce drunkenness.
His
wife, Virginia, died in January 1847. For the few remaining years of his life,
he helped support himself by delivering a series of public lectures. He got
involved in a number of romances. In 1848 Poe went to Providence, R.I., 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. 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.
Edgar Allan Poe Cause of Death
Poe
had some forebodings of death when he left Richmond for Baltimore late in
September. There at a party, he began to drink Leavily. The indulgence proved
fatal, for Poe had a weak heart. He died on Oct. 7, 1849 before he could marry
Elmira Royster. He was buried in Westminster Presbyterian churchyard in
Baltimore.
Edgar Allan Poe as a Poet
Poe supported affective experience or the old practice
of judging a poem by the emotional effect that it produces in the reader. Poe
stated that a poem deserves its title only inasmuch as it excites, by elevating
the soul."
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 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.
Much of Poe's best work is concerned with terror and sadness. His yearning for the ideal was both of the heart and of the imagination. His sensitiveness to the beauty and sweetness of women inspired his most touching lyrics ("To Helen," "Annable Lee," "Eulalie," "To One in Paradise"
Poe
is conspicuous for a close observation of minute details, as in the long
narratives and in many of the descriptions that introduces the tales or
constitute their settings. Closely connected with this is his power of
ratiocination.
Edgar Allan Poe Writing Style
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.
Edgar Allan Poe as a Critic
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 for the
ancient unities: i.e., the short 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.
Edgar Allan Poe The Raven Poem
It was important to Poe to make “The Raven'
"universally appreciable." It should be appreciated by the public, as
well as the critics. Poe chose Beauty to be the theme of the poem. He held that
simple earthly elements have the power to elevate a poet's soul to the vision
of Beauty; in order to reach this vision, the poet will form a pattern of
physical loveliness to reflect the perfect unity of the universe. Poe
considered sadness to be the highest manifestation of beauty. He chose the
universal theme of Death as his topic and believed that the death of a
beautiful woman was the most poetical use of death, because it closely allies
itself with Beauty.
Poe builds the tension in this poem up, stanza by stanza, but after the climaxing stanza he tears the whole thing down, and lets the narrator know that there is no meaning in searching for a moral in the raven's "nevermore”. The Raven is established as a symbol for the narrator's "Mournful and never-ending remembrance."
Annabel Lee Poem
"Annabel Lee" is the final poem composed
by Edgar Allan Poe. It was written in 1849 and published just few months before
his death. It highlights a subject that appears frequently in Poe's writing:
the death of a young, beautiful woman. The poem is narrated by Annabel Lee's
lover, who forcefully rails against the people—and supernatural beings—who
tried to get in the way of their love. Ultimately, the speaker claims that his
bond with Annabel Lee was so strong that, even after her death, they are still
together.
Edgar Allan Poe as a Short Story Writer
With
their gothic styling, tone of dread, atmosphere of unreality, and macabre
details, Poe’s tales seem at first glance to be simple scary stories. But
they’re more complex than that. Poe’s narratives are marked by dualistic themes
that recur from story to story. Perhaps they represent Poe’s own conflicting
fears, given his history of alcoholism and unrestrained bouts of self-sabotage.
The first of these dualistic themes is loss of control — either control of
one’s mind, or of one’s actions due to insanity or intoxication.
The Tell-Tale Heart
"The Tell-Tale Heart" is a short story by Edgar Allan Poe first published in 1843. It follows an unnamed narrator who insists on his sanity after murdering an old man with a "vulture eye". The murder is carefully calculated, and the murderer hides the body by cutting it into pieces and hiding it under the floorboards. Ultimately the narrator's guilt manifests itself in the hallucination that the man's heart is still beating under the floorboards.
It
is unclear what relationship, if any, the old man and his murderer share. It
has been suggested that the old man is a father figure or, perhaps, that his
vulture eye represents some sort of veiled secret. The ambiguity and lack of
details about the two main characters stand in stark contrast to the specific
plot details leading up to the murder.
The Fall of the House of Usher
“The Fall of the House of Usher”
possesses the quintessential -features of the Gothic tale: a haunted house,
dreary landscape, mysterious sickness, and doubled personality. Poe uses
traditional Gothic elements such as inclement weather and a barren landscape.
Poe creates a sensation of claustrophobia in this story.
The story begins without complete
explanation of the narrator’s motives for arriving at the house of Usher, and
this ambiguity sets the tone for a plot that continually blurs the real and the
fantastic. “The Fall of the House of
Usher” begins with the unidentified male narrator riding to the house of
Roderick Usher, a childhood friend whom the narrator has not seen in many years.
The Cask of Amontillado
"The Cask of Amontillado" by Edgar Allan Poe, is a short story inspired by true events that took place on Castle Island, a former military fort off of Boston Harbor, in Massachusetts. When Poe was stationed there as young cadet in the Army, he found a peculiar gravestone. After some inquiry, he learned a story of a man who had been walled up alive. Forbidden by his commander to ever repeat the particulars, Poe took the plot line, changed the setting and characters, and wrote this story.
The story is set in Italy, during the Carnival. The narrator, Montresor, without giving the particulars, explains that he has a grudge to settle with Fortunato, who insulted him. Both men being wine connoisseurs, Montresor lures Fortunato into his catacombs by promising him a fine bottle of Amontillado wine.
As the two men travel into the catacombs, Fortunato has no inkling that his friend will betray him. Fortunato is ill, battling a bad cough. Surprisingly, Montresor urges his friend to turn back. Laden with irony and foreshadowing, Fortunato claims, "I will not die of a cough” and continues with Montresor.
When the men finally reach the base of the crypt, Montresor has bricks and mortar awaiting them. He chains Fortunato to the wall and seals him in alive.
The Murders in the Rue Morgue
The Murders in the Rue Morgue is a
short story by the famous writer Edgar Allan Poe. The main character of this
story is a detective C. Auguste Dupin. He’s in charge in cases of bizarre
murders that occur mainly in Paris’ Rue Morgue. This detective later served as
a prototype for many detectives, presumably even the famous Sherlock Holmes
(Arthur Conan Doyle) and Hercule Poirot (Agatha Christie).
The Black Cat
"The
Black Cat" is yet another classic murder tale from Poe. The unreliable
first person narrator is writing his account on the eve of his execution for
murdering his wife. The story starts out with a boy who preferred the company
of animals to the company of his peers. When he grows up, he finds a woman who
feels the same way and they get married. The narrator admits throughout the
story that his bad habits, namely alcoholism, lead to his irrational
state of mind.
Edgar Allan Poe Short Stories
- The Unparalleled Adventures Of
- One Hans Pfaal
- The Gold-Bug
- Four Beasts In One—
- The Homo-Cameleopard
- The Murders In The Rue Morgue
- The Mystery Of Marie Roget
- The Balloon-Hoax
- Ms. Found In A Bottle
- The Oval Portrait
- The Purloined Letter
- The Thousand-And-Second Tale
- Of Scheherazade
- A Descent Into The Maelström.
- Von Kempelen And His Discovery
- Mesmeric Revelation
- The Facts In The Case Of M. Valdemar
- The Black Cat
- The Fall Of The House Of Usher
- Silence—A Fable
- The Masque Of The Red Death.
- The Cask Of Amontillado
- The Imp Of The Perverse
- The Island Of The Fay
- The Assignation
- The Pit And The Pendulum
- The Premature Burial
- The Domain Of Arnheim
- Landor's Cottage
- William Wilson
- The Tell-Tale Heart.
- Berenice
- Eleonora
- Ligeia
- Morella
- A Tale Of The Ragged Mountains
- The Spectacles
- King Pest.
- Three Sundays In A Week
- The Devil In The Belfry
- Lionizing
- X-Ing A Paragraph
- Metzengerstein
- The System Of Doctor Tarr And
- Professor Fether
- How To Write A Blackwood Article.
- A Predicament
- Mystification
- Diddling
- The Angel Of The Odd
- Mellonta Tauta
- The Duc De L'omelette.
- The Oblong Box.
- Loss Of Breath
- The Man That Was Used Up.
- The Business Man
- The Landscape Garden
- Maelzel's Chess-Player
- The Power Of Words
- The Colloquy Of Monos And Una
- The Conversation Of Eiros And Charmion
- Shadow—A Parable
Edgar
Allan Poe Poems
- Annabel Lee
- The Bells
- The City in the Sea
- A Dream Within a Dream
- To Helen
- Lenore
- The Raven
- Ulalume
0 Comments
Post a Comment