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Edgar Allan Poe: Guilty Conscience
An exploration of some of the works of Edgar Allan Poe. -- 2,120 words; MLA

The Case of Edgar Allan Poe
A look at the controversy surrounding the life and death of the author, Edgar Allan Poe. -- 2,085 words; MLA

Edgar Allan Poe
Discusses the life and works of author, Edgar Allan Poe. -- 525 words;

Edgar Allan Poe’s “Mystery Man”
An examination of the mysteries surrounding Edgar Allan Poe's strange graveyard character in “Mystery Man”. -- 2,405 words; APA

Edgar Allan Poe
This paper discusses Edgar Allan Poe, providing a brief biography of this writer. -- 900 words; MLA

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EDGAR ALLAN POE

Edgar Allan Poe was born in Boston, grew up in Richmond, Virginia, and lived in six
Eastern cities. His father was David Poe, a Baltimore actor. His actress mother,
Elizabeth came to the United States as a kid. The parents were not that talented; they
played small roles in rather third-rate theatrical companies. Because they both had small
parts they barely managed to make a living. Edgar was the second of their three children.
When the third child was born, the father died, or disappeared, and Mrs. Poe went to
Richmond with the two youngest children. The oldest boy, William Henry, had already been
left with relatives in Baltimore. Mrs. Poe was in the last stages of tuberculosis.
Weakened by the disease and worn out with the struggle to support her children, she died.
Edgar, two years old, and the infant, Rosalie, were left as orphans. It was pure luck
that Mrs. Frances Allan, the wife of a merchant in Richmond learned about the Poe babies.
She had no children of her own and liked handsome little Edgar a lot more than his
sister. She took him home with her, and another family took his little sister Rosalie.
Mrs. Allan would have liked to adopt Edgar, but her husband was unwilling to commit
himself. At that time people thought acting was immoral. John Allan could not help
regarding the little son of actor parents as a questionable person to inherit his name
and the fortune he was busy accumulating. He was willing however, to support the child,
and in time came to be proud of Edgar's good looks and intelligence. When Edgar was six
years old, Mr. Allen's business took him to Scotland, the country from which he had come
originally. The family stayed in Scotland and England for five years. Edgar was eleven
when the Allan's returned to Richmond. Richmond in back then in the 1820's was a good
place for a boy to live. It was still a small enough town for the fields, swamps, and
woods to be close by. Boys swam in the river and in the little creeks, they fished, they
tramped through the thick woods, looking for wild muscadines and chinquapins. In spite of
the growing tension between foster father and son, Mr. Allen was willing to send Edgar to
the University of Virginia. Edgar, in turn, was eager to go, to escape the Allen
household if for no other reason. The student life of the University was more social than
academic. The young men drank too much, gambled too much, fought for the sheer enjoyment
of violence, and rampaged over the campus at all hours. This was the worst possible
environment for young Poe with his emotionally unstable temperament. He was unusually
susceptible to alcohol; one mild drink sent him into a state of wild excitement. He
gambled recklessly, incurring debts he could not begin to pay. Mr. Allan's pride and
thrift could not tolerate such conduct. He pulled Edgar out of the University and set him
to work at a lowly, routine job in his counting house. This was a humiliation Edgar could
not bear; his answer was to leave home. He went to Boston, where he managed to publish a
collection of his poems in pamphlet form, Tamerlane and Other Poems. Desperate for money,
he joined the army under the name of Edgar A. Perry. Army barracks were no place for a
young aristocrat. Poe turned to his foster father with penitent letters, pleading for
reconciliation. Mr. Allen yielded sufficiently to purchase his release from the army,
which was possible at that time. Shortly afterward, a new volume of his poems was
published in Baltimore, Al Aaraaf, Tamerlane and Minor Poems. A little more than a year
after his release from the Army, the young poet turned again to the idea of a military
career. He passed entrance examinations and gained admission to the United States
Military Academy at West Point, New York. Poe knew than an army career was suitable for a
Virginia gentleman he longed to be, but the discipline was too hard for him. Two years
after his final dispute with Mr. Allan, Poe lived for a while in Baltimore with his aunt,
Mrs. Maria (Poe) Clemm. She was a poor seamstress, but she welcomed Poe into her home and
took care of him. In 1833 The Saturday Visitor of Baltimore announced a literary contest
with prizes of fifty dollars for the best short story, and twenty-five dollars for the
best poem. Poe submitted a group of stories, Tales of the Folio Club, and a poem, The
Coliseum. One of the stories, MS. Found in a Bottle, won the story prize, and his poem
would have won the poetry prize except that the judges decided not to award both prizes
to the same contestant. The prize money was not important, but one of the judges,
novelist John P. Kennedy, took an interest in Poe and befriended him by helping him sell
a story to the new Southern Literary Messenger of Richmond. Poe joined the editorial
staff of the magazine and soon became its editor. A number of his stories appeared in its
pages. Once established in his job, he brought Mrs. Clemm and her daughter, Virginia, to
live with him. A little later he married his cousin, Virginia, who was some years younger
than he. From that time on, the three formed a household. He has many problems with
drinking and therefore his job was on and off. Soon after moving to New York, his poem,
The Raven, was published in the New York Evening Mirror. It was reprinted in a number of
magazines, and at once became extremely popular. The Raven is not by any means Poe's best
poem. With The Raven, Poe reached the height of his fame. Poe was the originator of the
American short story. There had been other short works of fiction, but Poe perfected the
short story as an art form. Conan Doyle was influenced by him, particularly in their
early writing, before each had found his individual style. Poe led in his methods of
analysis in his detective stories. No one has outdone him in creating an atmosphere of
morbid horror in such tales as The Pit and the Pendulum and The Tell-Tale Heart. The best
of his poetry is pure magic. 
Bibliography 
Encarta 1999 Encyclopedia Grolier 1993 Encyclopedia

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