1083:"Lines on Joe Locke" was a short, two stanza poem written to make fun of a commanding officer during Poe's time at West Point. Poe was known for his funny verses on staff and faculty at the academy. Lieutenant Locke was either generally not well-liked, or Poe had a more personal vendetta with him. The poem teases that Locke "was never known to lie" in bed while roll was being called, and he was "well known to report" (i.e. cite cadets for discipline purposes).
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772:. The poem talks about an illness from which Richmond helped Poe recover. It speaks about "the fever called 'Living'" that has been conquered, ending his "moaning and groaning" and his "sighing and sobbing." In a letter dated March 23, 1849, Poe sent the poem he wrote to Richmond saying, "I think the lines 'For Annie' (those I now send) much the best I have ever written."
1790:, whose name is hidden within the lines of the poem. In its first publication, it had the title "To Her Whose Name Is Written Below." To find the name, take the first letter of the first line, then the second letter of the second line, then the third letter of the third line, and so on. Before its publication, it was presented at a private literary salon at the home of
118:" is a 22-line poem originally written in 1829, and left untitled and unpublished during Poe's lifetime. The original manuscript was signed "E. A. Poe" and dated March 17, 1829. In February of that year, Poe's foster mother Frances Allan had died. In September 1875, the poem, which had been in the possession of a family in Baltimore, was published with its title in
986:'s introduction to his 1734 translation of the Qu'ran: "The angel Israfil, who has the most melodious voice of all God's creatures." The poem details the beauty of the unearthly song of Israfil, as stars and other heavenly bodies stand transfixed in muted silence. Poe further alludes to Islam by referencing a
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with lines like "drunkenness of the soul" and "the glories of the bowl". In the poem, the speaker refers to some exotic bird that has been with him his whole life. He also says, "I could not love except where Death / Was mingling his with Beauty's breath", a line often termed autobiographical as many
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as another heavenly entity entrapped amidst the majesty of
Israfil's lyre. It is likely that such Islamic references were used to give the work an exotic feel. The poem concludes with the author wondering as to whether if their places traded, he could craft a bolder melody from his lyre than Israfil.
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that Poe would stay, at the invitation of the Lowell couple, while lecturing in Lowell. It was here that the relationship developed. He even wrote to her of purchasing a "cottage" in
Westford just to be closer to her and her family. The poem was first set to be published on April 28, 1849 in the
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introduced the poem and others by Poe as "nonsense". He did, however, admit that the work showed great promise in the author. His introduction read, "If E. A. P. of
Baltimore — whose lines about 'Heaven,' though he professes to regard them as altogether superior to any thing in the whole range of
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This lyric poem consists of five stanzas, with the first and last being nearly identical. The dream-voyager arrives in a place beyond time and space and decides to stay there. This place is odd yet majestic, with "mountains toppling evermore into seas without a shore". Even so, it is a "peaceful,
971:: "And the trumpet shall be blown, so all those that are in the heavens and all those that are in the earth shall swoon, except Allah; then it shall be blown again, then they shall stand up awaiting." —Qur'an (39.68). The more direct inspiration for Poe's introductory quotation comes from
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twice in 1845 - once in the April issue then cut down to four lines in the
September 6 issue with the more revealing title "To Frances." Referring to Frances S. Osgood, the speaker discusses the chaos and woes of his life, and how they are calmed by dreams of this woman he is addressing.
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with the name "E. A. Poe." The poem was never collected in any of Poe's anthologies during his lifetime and was re-discovered by John C. French in 1917. This poem contains extensive examples of allusions from Greek mythology to strengthen the themes of "the beauty of untouched nature."
350:". That poem seems autobiographical, referring to his joy upon marriage. The significance of the couplet implies that he has gone back into a state of loneliness similar to before his marriage. It has been found that the second line of Poe's couplet was adapted from "Zarifa", a poem by
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on April 26, 1845. It was unsigned but Poe biographer and critic T. O. Mabbott assigns it as Poe's without hesitation. Osgood copied the poem and gave it to her friend
Elizabeth Oakes Smith with the title "To the Sinless Child." This copy is now preserved in the library of the
1120:"A Pæan" is the original title of the poem that would become "Lenore". It was first published as part of an early collection in 1831 with only 11 quatrains and it did not mention the name Lenore. The name was not added until it was published as "Lenore" in February 1843 in
806:. It is believed Poe wrote the poem and sent it to his brother, who then sent it to the magazine. T. O. Mabbott felt that the rather tepid value of this slightly edited version of the poem suggests that they were made by William Henry, though perhaps with Edgar's approval.
901:, a woman with whom Poe exchanged love notes published in journals. Poe was married at the time, yet his friendship with Osgood was very public. This four-line poem, written with an almost juvenile tone, compares the woman's beautiful thoughts with her beautiful
1673:'s annual Valentine's Day parties, though the poem contains no romantic or particularly personal overtones. The poem says the narrator attempts to leave but can not, as he is "spelled" by art. He compares this attraction to a snake beguiling a bird from a tree.
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American poetry, save two or three trifles referred to, are, though nonsense, rather exquisite nonsense — would but do himself justice, might make a beautiful and perhaps magnificent poem. There is a good deal to justify such a hope." It was first collected in
874:. The 20-line poem is made up of rhymed couplets where the speaker likens his youth to a dream as his reality becomes more and more difficult. It has been considered potentially autobiographical, written during deepening strains in Poe's relationship with his
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as "To —— ——". Poe never pursued a romantic relationship with Shew, and the poem has no strong romantic overtones. It discusses the writer's inability to write, distracted by the thought of "thee". The poem also references an earlier poem of Poe, "Israfel".
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on
January 23, 1845, the poem is generally accepted as being written by Poe, though it was published anonymously. The title neglected to capitalize "street." The humorous poem of four rhyming couplets tells savvy people interested in gaining wealth to avoid
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An unpublished, untitled manuscript, a date at the bottom of the original copy ("May the 1st, 1827") appears to have been written by someone other than Poe. The date is questionable for this reason. The poem, which may be incomplete, tells of the speaker's
1617:"To Margaret" may be an unfinished poem, never published in Poe's lifetime. In the original manuscript, dated 1827, Poe cites the references to other, mostly classical works, from each of his lines. The seven-line poem, according to Poe's notes, refers to
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is her first name, spelled out by the first letter of each line). It was never published in Poe's lifetime. James H. Whitty discovered the poem and included it in his 1911 anthology of Poe's works under the title "From an Album". It was also published in
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A simple 8-line poem, "Lines on Ale" may have been written by Poe to pay his drinking bill. It was discovered at the
Washington Tavern in Lowell, Massachusetts where it was written. The original copy hung on the wall of the tavern until about 1920.
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Never published in Poe's lifetime, it was found as a manuscript dated
February 14, 1847. It was included in the 1969 anthology edited by Thomas Olive Mabbott. The "Unknown Poe" anthology edited by Raymond Foye titles it "To Louise Oliver Hunter".
1501:. One story suggests that Virginia's mother Maria expedited Poe's marriage to Virginia in order to prevent Poe's involvement with Eliza White. T. W. White's apprentice in old age would later say that Poe and Eliza were nothing more than friends.
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This, another of several poems by Poe addressed to an unnamed person, begins with the line "Not long ago, the writer of these lines..." It was later renamed "To Marie Louise" for Marie Louise Shew, a woman who helped Poe's wife as she was dying.
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on July 26, 1845. The poem compares the sea and the shore to the body and the soul. There is a death of the body that is silence, the speaker says, that should not be mourned. He does, however, warn against the silent death of the soul.
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Poe praised "The
Sleeper" as a "superior" poem. He wrote to an admirer: "In the higher qualities of poetry, it is better than 'The Raven'—but there is not one man in a million who could be brought to agree with me in this opinion."
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Believed to have been written in 1829, "Elizabeth" was never published in Poe's lifetime. It was written for his
Baltimore cousin, Elizabeth Rebecca Herring. Poe also wrote "An Acrostic" to her as well as the poem that would become
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which says that science is the enemy of the poet because it takes away the mysteries of the world. Poe was concerned with the recent influx of modern science and social science and how it potentially undermined spiritual beliefs.
956:"Israfel" varies in meter; however, it contains mostly iambic feet, complemented by end rhyme in which several of the lines in each stanza rhyme together. Poe also uses frequent alliteration within each line in any given stanza.
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in 1844. Like many of Poe's works, the poem focuses on the death of a beautiful woman, a death which the mourning narrator struggles to deal with while considering the nature of death and life. Some lines seem to echo the poem
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Poe Society, Hunter was a college student who entered a poetry contest judged by Poe in 1845. Hunter won, and Poe read her poem at a commencement ceremony on July 11, 1845. Poe's poem may have been written as part of one of
1280:, who broke off her engagement with Poe presumably due to her father. She instead married the wealthy Alexander Shelton. If this is the case, Poe was taking poetic license: he was not in Richmond at the time of her wedding.
577:. Marie Louise Shew (Virginia's one-time volunteer nurse, of sorts) later said that Poe called Lewis a "fat, gaudily-dressed woman." Poe's biographer, Arthur Hobson Quinn, called "An Enigma" "one of Poe's feeblest poems".
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and deals with the speaker's loss which leaves him with "a funeral mind". The poem, despite its many reprintings, never had any significant revisions. The second "To ——" was republished in the December 1829 issue of the
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This poem, most likely incomplete, was never printed in Poe's lifetime. Its two lines were found written on a page of some of John Allan's financial records. This is the earliest surviving manuscript in Poe's own hand.
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The Koran, commonly called the Alcoran of Mohammed: translated into English immediately from the original Arabic; with explanatory notes, taken from the most approved commentators, to which is prefixed a preliminary
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as "Lines Written in an Album" and apparently addressed to Eliza White. The poem in this version began, "Eliza! let thy generous heart / From its present pathway part not." White was the then 18-year-old daughter of
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The last complete poem written by Poe, it was published shortly after his death in 1849. The speaker of the poem talks about a lost love, Annabel Lee, and may have been based on Poe's own relationship with his wife
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This title refers to two poems carrying the same name. One begins with the lines "The bowers whereat, in dreams, I see." The other begins "Should my early life seem". Both first appeared collected in the 1829
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A heartful sonnet written to Poe's mother-in-law and aunt Maria Clemm, "To My Mother" says that the mother of the woman he loved is more important than his own mother. It was first published in July, 1849 in
1106:). This phrase, which is commonly used to criticize present-day customs and attitudes, helps illustrate Poe's opinion that many men and politicians (during his lifetime) act as if they have no manners.
233:. Despite her reassurances that she is "happy," the poem has a somber tone as it recounts a previous love who has died. In marrying, she has broken her vow to this previous lover to love him eternally.
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in 1827, the speaker tells of a former love he saw from afar on her wedding day. A blush on her cheek, despite all the happiness around her, displays a hidden shame for having lost the speaker's love.
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under the pseudonym "Henry Wilton". Poe was outraged by what he considered nepotism; Hewitt later claimed that the two had a fistfight in the streets of Baltimore, though no evidence proves the event.
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Originally a poem called "To Elizabeth," dedicated to Poe's cousin Elizabeth Herring and written in an album of hers. It was then published in a revised version in the September 1835 issue of the
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In its first publication in 1831, "The City in the Sea" was published as "The Doomed City" before being renamed in 1845. It presents a personified Death sitting on the throne of a "strange city."
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in 1831, this poem evolved into the version "The Valley of Unrest" now anthologized. In its original version, the speaker asks if all things lovely are far away, and that the valley is part
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on May 11, 1833. It was signed "TAMERLANE" (just as the poem "Fanny," which would be printed in the same periodical one week later) and addressed to an anonymous woman. It is essentially a
1711:"The Visionary" (later renamed "The Assignation"). It evolved into "To Ianthe in Heaven" and then into "To One Beloved" before being named "To One in Paradise" in the February 25, 1843
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for Octavia being so strong, even "wit, and wine, and friends" can not distract him from it. Every throb of his heart, the narrator says, threatens to make his heart break for Octavia.
967:, the name "Israfel" does not appear in the Qu'ran itself; instead, mention is repeatedly made of an unnamed trumpet-angel, traditionally assumed to represent the archangel
343:. It is assumed that the poem was inspired by her death. It is difficult to discern, however, if Poe had intended the completed poem to be published or if it was personal.
760:, which Poe said was a "paper for which sheer necessity compels me to write." Fearing its publication there would consign it "to the tomb of the Capulets," he sent it to
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and who has "the sweetest voice of all God's creatures." His song quiets the stars, the poem says, while the Earth-bound poet is limited in his own "music". Poe's friend
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122:. The editor, E. L. Didier, also reproduced a facsimile of the manuscript, though he admitted he added the date himself. The poem is now often included in anthologies.
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Nancy Richmond would officially change her name to Annie after her husband's death in 1873. A large Granite Marker was erected for Poe at the historic Heywood home in
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in 1827. The narrator's "dream of joy departed" causes him to compare and contrast dream and "broken-hearted" reality. Its title was attached when it was published in
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244:". He is referring to the name of the bride's dead lover, "D'Elormie", which he calls "patently a forced rhyme" for "o'er me" and "before me" in the previous lines.
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1124:. This original version of the poem is so dissimilar from "Lenore" that it is often considered an entirely different poem. Both are usually collected separately in
1814:, and a large part broken heart. It mentions a woman named "Helen", which may actually refer to Jane Stanard, one of Poe's first loves and the mother of a friend.
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106:
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376:, to whom the writer pledges his devotion. It was first identified as Poe's in an article on November 21, 1915, using the poem's signature of "P." as evidence.
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with the name Sarah Anna Lewis (also known as "Stella"). Lewis was an amateur poet who met Poe shortly after the death of his wife Virginia while he lived in
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in 1827. Poe may have written it while serving in the army. The poem discusses a self-pitying loss of youth, though it was written when Poe was about 19.
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1563:"To Isaac Lea" is an unfinished poem, presumed written in May 1829. Only four lines are known to exist. It seems to come from a letter Poe wrote to
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197:. It was never printed during his lifetime, and it now appears to be lost. Shew was able to recall about a tenth of a poem in a letter to editor
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Not to be confused with Poe's short story "Silence: A Fable", "Silence – A Sonnet" was first published on January 4, 1840, in the Philadelphia
791:"The Happiest Day", or "The Happiest Day, the Happiest Hour", is a six-quatrain poem. It was first published as part of Poe's first collection
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he sees look cold, except for one "Proud Evening Star" which looks warm with a "distant fire" the other stars lack. The poem was influenced by
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s November issue that year. It became the second of Poe's "To Helen" poems when published as "To Helen" in the October 10, 1849 issue of the
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of how he threw the submission into the fire and joyfully watched it burn. Nonetheless, it was soon published in the September 1829 issue of
448:, "Dream-Land" (also called "Dreamland") was the only poem Poe published that year. It was quickly republished in a June 1845 edition of the
626:"Evangeline" was included at the end of Poe's 1848 essay "The Rationale of Verse." It was first published in the November 1848 issue of the
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This poem, mostly a sarcastic jab at a clerk named Pitts, starts out with the words "O, Times! O, Manners!" (an English translation of
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Written while Poe was at West Point, "Israfel" is a poem in eight stanzas of varying lengths that was first published in April 1831 in
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it was lumped into one large stanza. In a copy of that collection he sent to Sarah Helen Whitman, Poe crossed out the word "Catholic."
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called it "one of finest creations", with each phrase contributing to one effect: a human traveler wandering between life and death.
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in December 1845 and signed "P." It was attributed to Poe based on a copy owned by Frances Osgood, on which she had pencilled notes.
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is directed at the beauty of untouched nature, as well as an unnamed lover. It was first printed in the April 20, 1833, issue of the
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1075:, saying he will drain another glass. He enjoys the "hilarious visions" and "queerest fancies" that enter his brain while drinking.
277:"The Coliseum" explores Rome as a past glory that still exists in imagination. Poe submitted the poem to a contest sponsored by the
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as she was dying. The original manuscript was sent directly to her, dated February 14, 1847. A revised version was printed in
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Benton, Richard (1987). "Friends and Enemies: Women in the Life of Edgar Allan Poe". In Fisher IV, Benjamin Franklin (ed.).
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Barger, Andrew (2022). "Frances Osgood's Connections to Edgar Allan Poe's Couplet and the Stuart Manuscript of 'Eulalie.'".
571:. Lewis's husband paid Poe $ 100 to write a review of Sarah's work. That review appeared in the September 1848 issue of the
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First published as a separate poem in 1843, "The Conqueror Worm" was later incorporated into the text of Poe's short story "
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after being cut from 40 lines to 13. The narrator of this poem equates breaking with his love as one of several failures.
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The speaker asks the addressee, "Thou wouldst be loved?" and suggest she stay on her current path to achieve that goal.
125:"Alone" is often interpreted as autobiographical, expressing the author's feelings of isolation and inner torment. Poet
434:"A Dream Within a Dream" was first published in 1849, the year of Poe's death, and asks if all life is really a dream.
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on February 14, 1846. Though Poe was not in attendance, it was a very public revelation of his affection for Osgood.
91:, and tells of the afterlife in the place called Al Aaraaf. Poe included it as the major poem in his 1829 collection
1823:. This version of the poem is shorter and quite different from its predecessor, and there is no mention of "Helen".
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a haunted man". The poem, however, is an introspective about Poe's youth, written when he was only 20 years old.
847:, thanking her for hearing her prayers and pleading for a bright future. When it was included in the collection
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on May 22, 1841. Poe considered it one of his best compositions, according to a note he sent to fellow author
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29:(January 19, 1809 – October 7, 1849), listed alphabetically with the date of their authorship in parentheses.
1055:"Lenore" discusses proper decorum in the wake of the death of a young woman. It began as a different poem, "
229:. The poem is unusual for Poe because it is written in the voice of a woman, specifically a recently married
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The poem that would become "The Sleeper" went through many revised versions. First, in the 1831 collection
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on May 18, 1833, the poem laments the death of a young love. It was originally signed only as "TAMERLANE."
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The poem is one of the few works by Poe to be written in the voice of a woman. See also the humorous tale "
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says that "Bridal Ballad" is guilty of "one of the most unfortunate rhymes in American poetry this side of
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1041:, Poe reworked the first line ("In youth's spring, it was my lot") to "In spring of youth it was my lot."
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1337:"Spirits of the Dead" was first titled "Visits of the Dead" when it was published in the 1827 collection
498:. A traveler asks a "shade" where to find the legendary city of gold and is told to "ride, boldly ride."
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Date of Decree Sept. 23, 1879 Middlesex County, Massachusetts Probate Civil #9378, Lowell, Massachusetts
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837:. It was later published as a stand-alone poem as "A Catholic Hymn" in the August 16, 1845 issue of the
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65:, an English artist known for signing her work with those initials. "Zantippe" in line four is actually
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The eighth line of the poem is typically pushed slightly to the left of the other lines' indentation.
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335:, presumably part of an unfinished poem Poe was writing in 1847. In January of that year, Poe's wife
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1349:. The spirit tells the person that those who one knows in life surround a person in death as well.
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1567:, noted as a publishing partner in Philadelphia who was interested in natural history, especially
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The poem depicts a joyful narrator who carelessly lets time go by as he asks for another drink of
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in 1875; these fragments were published in 1909, and appear to be all that remains of the piece.
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1236:, it appeared with 74 lines as "Irene." It was 60 lines when it was printed in the Philadelphia
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323:". The poem seems to imply that all life is a worthless drama that inevitably leads to death.
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An unpublished 9-line poem written circa 1829 for Poe's cousin Elizabeth Rebecca Herring (the
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1497:. Poe may have considered pursuing a relationship with her before his marriage to his cousin
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1405:. The first, consisting of 12 lines, was reprinted in the September 20, 1845, issue of the
283:, which offered a prize of $ 25 to the winner. The judges chose a poem submitted by editor
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long, although a version with nine stanzas was supposedly prepared by Poe for publication
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751:, though complicated, relationship with her. It was at Nancy's (Heywood) family farm in
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Poe's original manuscript of "O, Tempora! O, Mores!" was lost. It was first printed by
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in 1908. The manuscript is believed to date back to 1836; only three lines are known.
995:'s "Kubla Khan" in the inspiring yet ultimately unfulfilling song of a heavenly muse.
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in its October 26, 1833, issue. It was later incorporated into Poe's unfinished drama
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2737:, edited by Richard Beale Davis. New York: E. P. Dutton & Co., Inc., 1952. p. 78.
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Poe toyed with the working title "Alone" before this poem was printed as "To M——" in
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A poem, most likely incomplete, that was found in Poe's desk at the offices of the
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739:"For Annie" was written for Nancy L. (Heywood) Richmond (whom Poe called Annie) of
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523:, "Enigma" is a riddle that hints at 11 authors. Line two, for example, references
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1317:. The poem praises the beauty of the island Zante. The last two lines, written in
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Original manuscript of a revision of "Spirits of the Dead" in Poe's handwriting.
1033:. The poem is a celebration of loneliness and the thoughts inspired by a remote
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tradition. While Poe attributes the introductory quotation about Israfel to the
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and is about a man who overcomes his sadness by marrying the beautiful Eulalie.
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made the same observation, calling the rhyme "ludicrous" and "horribly vulgar".
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1345:. The poem follows a dialogue between a dead speaker and a person visiting his
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said "Israfil" comes the closest to matching Poe's ideal of the art of poetry.
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219:, it was later retitled as "Bridal Ballad" when it was printed in the July 31,
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The poem that begins "Beloved! amid the earnest woes..." was published by the
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This poem begins "Sleep on, sleep on, another hour" and first appeared in the
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in October 1845. The "King" of the title is Ellen King, possibly representing
58:
1371:
The title "Stanzas" was assigned to this untitled poem originally printed in
1180:
of the women in Poe's love life were ill (an early love Jane Stanard died of
3817:
3293:
3237:
1817:
The poem was renamed "The Valley of Unrest" for the April 1845 issue of the
1729:. "To One in Paradise" was published posthumously in 1904 and written for a
1564:
1146:
1125:
902:
894:
495:
459:
82:
66:
964:
2377:
Huxley, Aldous (1967). "Vulgarity in Literature". In Regan, Robert (ed.).
1468:
s July 1835 issue. It was also revised into "To One Departed," printed in
682:
Originally titled "Heaven," "Fairy-Land" was written while Poe was at the
3633:
3251:
3168:
1530:
1504:
The poem was renamed to the ambiguous "To —" in the August 1839 issue of
1294:"To Science", or "Sonnet – To Science", is a traditional 14-line English
1197:
70:
38:
2981:
Poe's Literary Battles: The Critic in the Context of His Literary Milieu
1707:"To One in Paradise" was first published without a title as part of the
559:
under its original simple title "Sonnet." Its new title was attached by
3300:
3286:
2627:
http://www.bc.edu/schools/cas/english/poebostonexhibit/poeslife/49.html
2601:
http://www.bc.edu/schools/cas/english/poebostonexhibit/poeslife/49.html
1772:
1431:
968:
960:
938:
825:
This 16-line poem was sung by the title character in Poe's short story
648:
early in Poe's career in 1827. In the poem, a stargazer thinks all the
607:
564:
347:
332:
1786:
s February 21, 1846 issue, "A Valentine" was written specifically for
598:. Instead, it suggests, fold your money in half, thereby doubling it.
3395:
3055:
The Unknown Poe: An Anthology of Fugitive Writings by Edgar Allan Poe
1643:
Written in 1847 for Marie Louise Shew, voluntary nurse of Poe's wife
1308:
1295:
1266:
552:
548:
320:
191:
21:
1375:
in 1827. Another poem with the title "Stanzas" was published in the
1171:. It took the title "Romance" in the February 25, 1843 issue of the
931:. It was re-worked and republished for the August 1836 issue of the
719:
from 1997 to 2000, said "Fairy-Land" was one of his favorite poems.
870:
The poem "Imitation" was first published in Poe's early collection
798:
A nearly identical poem called "Original" written by Poe's brother
3173:
2402:
Edgar Allan Poe: An Illustrated Companion to His Tell-Tale Stories
1811:
1807:
1734:
1730:
1461:
It was actually a re-working of "To Mary," first published in the
1328:
1318:
987:
942:
524:
482:
422:
383:
230:
183:
102:
88:
1722:
considered "To One in Paradise" one of his most preferred poems.
1601:
Poe wrote this poem to Marie Louise Shew, who helped Poe's wife
1034:
946:
709:
in 1829. In that collection, Poe dedicated "Tamerlane" to Neal.
649:
595:
3177:
1737:. It is also the basis of the song "To One in Paradise" on the
1686:. It has alternately been published as "Sonnet to My Mother."
1474:, March 1842, before it was ever addressed to Frances Osgood.
1253:, a poet known to have had a heavy influence on Poe's poetry.
1156:"Romance (poem)" redirects here. For the genre of poetry, see
1072:
1025:
First appearing simply as "The Lake" in Poe's 1827 collection
346:
Poe scribbled the couplet onto a manuscript copy of his poem "
2806:. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press. p. 48.
2549:
The Poe Log: A Documentary Life of Edgar Allan Poe, 1809–1849
1163:"Romance" first appeared as "Preface" in the 1829 collection
1001:
likened Poe himself to Israfil and titled his 1934 biography
908:
The poem, which consists of four lines, was published in the
659:
The poem was not included in Poe's second poetry collection,
535:
attributed the poem to Poe – and solved the riddles. See the
290:
Despite the controversy, "The Coliseum" was published by the
166:
First published after Poe's death, "The Bells" is a heavily
73:. The spelling of the name was changed to fit the acrostic.
1510:. With minor revisions, it was finally renamed in honor of
802:
was first published in the September 15, 1827 issue of the
1311:, it was first published in the January 1837 issue of the
881:
After several revisions, this poem evolved into the poem "
178:"The Beloved Physician" was written around April 1847 for
690:, who wrote in an edition of "The Editor's Table" of the
3150:
2882:
Midnight Dreary: The Mysterious Death of Edgar Allan Poe
2176:
61:
with that name. The "L. E. L." in the third line may be
1827:
Chronologically ordered list of Edgar Allan Poe's poems
305:, Poe put "The Coliseum" as one of his six best poems.
53:
The poem mentions "Endymion", possibly referring to an
2750:
The Collected Works of Edgar Allan Poe - Vol. I: Poems
16:
List of known poems by American writer Edgar Allan Poe
2116:
555:
form, "An Enigma" was published in March 1848 in the
2956:. New York: Harper Perennial. pp. 106, 469–70.
2128:
1276:
It is believed to reference Poe's lost teenage love
779:, where he stayed. Annie L. Richmond is buried in a
519:
First printed in the February 2, 1833, issue of the
3908:
3805:
3770:
3751:
3724:
3697:
3643:
3338:
3220:
2954:
Edgar A. Poe: Mournful and Never-ending Remembrance
2724:. New York: Russell & Russell, Inc., 1962: 205.
2697:
Edgar A. Poe: Mournful and Never-ending Remembrance
2537:. New York: Russell & Russell, Inc., 1962: 152.
2437:
Edgar A. Poe: Mournful and Never-ending Remembrance
2122:
1321:, are also used in Poe's earlier poem "Al Aaraaf."
959:The poem contains a few references to figures from
3112:
2978:
2849:
2804:Private Perry and Mister Poe: The West Point Poems
2485:
2378:
2303:
2248:
2230:
1840:
1544:in 1848. It was published as "To —— —— ——" in the
1029:, the amended title appeared in 1829 collected in
508:
209:First published simply as "Ballad" in the January
3096:. Baltimore: The Johns Hopkins University Press.
3077:. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press.
1217:. After some revision, it was republished in the
1184:, as did his wife Virginia; also, his later love
743:. Richmond was married to Charles B. Richmond of
2782:"IN Harmony: Sheet Music from Indiana - Israfel"
2014:
1341:. The title was changed for the 1829 collection
937:. In an introduction to the poem, Poe says that
663:, and was never re-printed during his lifetime.
3706:The Narrative of Arthur Gordon Pym of Nantucket
2848:Campbell, Killis (1962). "The Origins of Poe".
2662:http://www.eapoe.org/works/letters/p4903230.htm
2597:http://www.eapoe.org/works/letters/p4811160.htm
2547:Thomas, Dwight & Jackson, David K. (1987).
2385:. Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice-Hall. p.
1984:
1960:
1882:
458:soothing region" and is a hidden treasure like
129:believed "Alone" was evidence that "Poe really
3606:The System of Doctor Tarr and Professor Fether
2985:. Southern Illinois University Press. p.
2884:. New York: St. Martin's Minotaur. p. 8.
2716:
2714:
2712:
2092:
2080:
2050:
1924:
1802:Though first published as "The Valley Nis" in
1759:, it was also included in the 1845 collection
1003:Israfel: The Life and Times of Edgar Allan Poe
666:"Evening Star" was adapted by choral composer
3389:The Unparalleled Adventure of One Hans Pfaall
3189:
2913:. New York: Oxford University Press. p.
2771:. London: J. Wilcox at Virgil's, 1732. p. 99.
2683:"Buried Treasure — A Tour of Lowell Cemetery"
2613:"Buried Treasure — A Tour of Lowell Cemetery"
2338:. New York: Cooper Square Press. p. 16.
2152:
2074:
686:at West Point. Poe first offered the poem to
362:"The Divine Right of Kings" is attributed to
8:
3592:The Thousand-and-Second Tale of Scheherazade
2492:. New York: Russell & Russell. pp.
2467:Poe Studies: History, Theory, Interpretation
1858:
2856:. New York: Russell & Russell. p.
2699:. New York: Harper Perennial, 1991. p. 84.
2551:. Boston: G. K. Hall & Co. p. 99.
2310:. New York: Russell & Russell. p.
2170:
1918:
1647:, it was not published until March 1848 in
1175:. The early versions made some allusion to
430:"A Dream Within a Dream" by Edgar Allan Poe
186:who also inspired Poe's more famous poem, "
3196:
3182:
3174:
3028:. Baltimore: The Edgar Allan Poe Society.
2938:
2936:
2934:
2764:Section IV of "The Preliminary Discourse."
2753:. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard, 1969. p. 171.
2595:Graniteville Rd, Westford, Massachusetts;
2484:Campbell, Killis (1962). "The Poe Canon".
2302:Campbell, Killis (1962). "The Poe Canon".
2062:
1269:-style poem, which was first published in
442:First published in the June 1844 issue of
366:, though not fully proven. It appeared in
3026:Myths and Reality: The Mysterious Mr. Poe
2586:Massachusetts Town and Vital Records 1821
2404:. New York: Metro Books. pp. 54–55.
2158:
2068:
1725:The poem inspired a song composed by Sir
656:poem "While Gazing on the Moon's Light".
612:"Eulalie" was first published in 1845 in
3013:. New York: New Directions. p. 233.
2533:Campbell, Killis. "The Origins of Poe",
2242:
2212:
2164:
2020:
1978:
1852:
1493:, Poe's employer while he worked at the
2285:
2254:
2224:
2146:
2002:
1900:
831:, first published in April 1835 in the
531:. It was signed only with "P.", though
399:that first appeared without a title in
301:In a July 1844 letter to fellow author
87:This poem is based on stories from the
3438:The Conversation of Eiros and Charmion
2440:. New York: Harper Perennial. p.
2206:
2110:
1948:
1906:
862:written for chorus and piano in 1993.
697:The Yankee and Boston Literary Gazette
494:A short poem referencing the mythical
3949:Edgar Allan Poe: Once Upon a Midnight
3141:An omnibus collection of Poe's poetry
3094:Edgar Allan Poe: A Critical Biography
2909:A Historical Guide to Edgar Allan Poe
2625:Letter by Poe to Nancy Nov.16, 1848;
2571:"Sesquicentennial Tribute to Poe" on
2236:
2200:
2188:
2134:
1942:
1930:
1894:
1864:
1757:Al Aaraaf, Tamerlane, and Minor Poems
1587:Al Aaraaf, Tamerlane, and Minor Poems
1514:and published in the 1845 collection
1403:Al Aaraaf, Tamerlane, and Minor Poems
1343:Al Aaraaf, Tamerlane, and Minor Poems
1165:Al Aaraaf, Tamerlane, and Minor Poems
1031:Al Aaraaf, Tamerlane, and Minor Poems
783:, cemetery with her husband Charles.
707:Al Aaraaf, Tamerlane, and Minor Poems
661:Al Aaraaf, Tamerlane, and Minor Poems
407:Al Aaraaf, Tamerlane, and Minor Poems
93:Al Aaraaf, Tamerlane, and Minor Poems
7:
3741:Tales of the Grotesque and Arabesque
3613:The Facts in the Case of M. Valdemar
3151:"The Edgar Allan Poe Society online"
3058:. San Francisco: City Lights Books.
2644:Edgar Allan Poe Society of Baltimore
2381:Poe: A Collection of Critical Essays
2336:Edgar Allan Poe: His Life and Legacy
2218:
2194:
2038:
2008:
1972:
1870:
1540:The original manuscript was sent to
1167:, then in 1831 as "Introduction" in
557:Union Magazine of Literature and Art
2720:Campbell, Killis. "The Poe Canon",
2638:Poe, Edgar Allan (April 20, 1849).
2182:
2098:
2086:
1990:
1954:
1888:
1846:
1656:To Miss Louise Olivia Hunter (1847)
3899:Tales of Mystery & Imagination
2650:from the original on Aug 11, 2022.
2140:
2104:
2026:
1996:
1912:
1834:
1414:Yankee and Boston Literary Gazette
1056:
717:Poet Laureate of the United States
48:Collected Works of Edgar Allan Poe
14:
3009:Williams, William Carlos (1925).
2852:The Mind of Poe and Other Studies
2722:The Mind of Poe and Other Studies
2535:The Mind of Poe and Other Studies
2488:The Mind of Poe and Other Studies
2306:The Mind of Poe and Other Studies
2044:
2032:
1966:
1936:
3848:Edgar Allan Poe House and Museum
3157:
2905:Kennedy, J. Gerald, ed. (2001).
2056:
1876:
1782:First published in the New York
1744:Tales of Mystery and Imagination
860:Three Songs from Edgar Allan Poe
672:Three Songs from Edgar Allan Poe
358:The Divine Right of Kings (1845)
3813:Virginia Eliza Clemm Poe (wife)
2880:Walsh, John Evangelist (2000).
2268:Bibliography of Edgar Allan Poe
1571:. Poe would attach his name to
1005:. The poem was set to music by
889:Impromptu. To Kate Carol (1845)
858:included "Hymn" as part of his
615:American Review: A Whig Journal
190:". The poem was originally ten
170:poem known for its repetition.
3833:Rosalie Mackenzie Poe (sister)
3543:A Tale of the Ragged Mountains
3424:The Fall of the House of Usher
684:United States Military Academy
644:by Poe was first collected in
581:Epigram for Wall Street (1845)
24:by American author and critic
1:
3779:The Conchologist's First Book
3673:The Philosophy of Composition
3473:Never Bet the Devil Your Head
3459:The Murders in the Rue Morgue
3119:. New York: Checkmark Books.
3092:Quinn, Arthur Hobson (1998).
1574:The Conchologist's First Book
1507:Burton's Gentleman's Magazine
1478:To F——s S. O——d (1835 / 1845)
1087:O, Tempora! O, Mores! (1825?)
945:as an angel whose heart is a
747:, and Poe developed a strong
490:"Eldorado" by Edgar Allan Poe
413:A Dream Within a Dream (1849)
19:This article lists all known
3933:The Loves of Edgar Allan Poe
3714:The Journal of Julius Rodman
3466:A Descent into the Maelström
2574:The NewsHour with Jim Lehrer
2177:To Miss Louise Olivia Hunter
1173:Philadelphia Saturday Museum
391:"A Dream" by Edgar Allan Poe
3828:William Henry Poe (brother)
3659:The Philosophy of Furniture
3494:The Masque of the Red Death
3167:public domain audiobook at
3075:Poe Poe Poe Poe Poe Poe Poe
3052:Foye, Raymond, ed. (1980).
2952:Silverman, Kenneth (1991).
2434:Silverman, Kenneth (1991).
1798:The Valley of Unrest (1831)
1589:. Poe would use the title "
1485:Southern Literary Messenger
1464:Southern Literary Messenger
1360:Southern Literary Messenger
1314:Southern Literary Messenger
934:Southern Literary Messenger
834:Southern Literary Messenger
629:Southern Literary Messenger
574:Southern Literary Messenger
216:Southern Literary Messenger
152:, though that is disputed.
4014:
3666:Morning on the Wissahiccon
3501:The Mystery of Marie Rogêt
2660:Letter From Poe to Annie-
1770:
1528:
1427:Baltimore Saturday Visiter
1388:
1325:Spirits of the Dead (1827)
1287:
1284:Sonnet — To Science (1829)
1202:Baltimore Saturday Visiter
1155:
1144:
1113:
1048:
1037:. For the 1845 collection
813:
729:Baltimore Saturday Visiter
605:
521:Baltimore Saturday Visiter
476:
416:
312:
280:Baltimore Saturday Visiter
262:
259:The City in the Sea (1831)
159:
140:
110:"Alone" by Edgar Allan Poe
80:
50:in 1969 as "An Acrostic".
3993:Poetry by Edgar Allan Poe
3733:Tamerlane and Other Poems
3211:
2274:Tamerlane and Other Poems
2117:The Divine Right of Kings
1761:The Raven and Other Poems
1703:To One in Paradise (1833)
1609:s March 13, 1847, issue.
1516:The Raven and Other Poems
1373:Tamerlane and Other Poems
1339:Tamerlane and Other Poems
1271:Tamerlane and Other Poems
1188:had a weak heart, etc.).
1039:The Raven and Other Poems
1027:Tamerlane and Other Poems
872:Tamerlane and Other Poems
849:The Raven and Other Poems
843:. The poem addresses the
816:The Haunted Palace (poem)
810:The Haunted Palace (1839)
800:William Henry Leonard Poe
793:Tamerlane and Other Poems
646:Tamerlane and Other Poems
402:Tamerlane and Other Poems
309:The Conqueror Worm (1843)
3508:The Pit and the Pendulum
3417:The Man That Was Used Up
3073:Hoffman, Daniel (1998).
2977:Moss, Sidney P. (1969).
2802:Hecker, William (2005).
2733:Chivers, Thomas Holley.
2334:Meyers, Jeffrey (1992).
2129:Impromptu. To Kate Carol
1303:Sonnet — To Zante (1837)
715:, who held the title of
585:Printed in the New York
527:and the ninth refers to
339:had died in New York of
174:Beloved Physician (1847)
63:Letitia Elizabeth Landon
3620:The Cask of Amontillado
3599:The Imp of the Perverse
3585:Some Words with a Mummy
3410:The Devil in the Belfry
3115:Edgar Allan Poe: A to Z
2400:Poe, Harry Lee (2008).
2123:Epigram for Wall Street
1720:William Carlos Williams
1251:Samuel Taylor Coleridge
1104:"O, Tempora! O, Mores!"
993:Samuel Taylor Coleridge
982:which itself footnotes
787:The Happiest Day (1827)
777:Westford, Massachusetts
764:for publication in the
762:Nathaniel Parker Willis
753:Westford, Massachusetts
741:Westford, Massachusetts
727:First published in the
700:. The journal's editor
688:Nathaniel Parker Willis
563:. Its lines conceal an
3853:National Historic Site
3823:David Poe Jr. (father)
3652:Maelzel's Chess Player
3308:A Dream Within a Dream
3111:Sova, Dawn B. (2001).
2748:Notes on "Israfel" in
2231:A Dream Within A Dream
1788:Frances Sargent Osgood
1751:To The River —— (1828)
1639:To Marie Louise (1847)
1553:New York Daily Tribune
1512:Frances Sargent Osgood
1334:
917:University of Virginia
899:Frances Sargent Osgood
883:A Dream Within a Dream
491:
431:
419:A Dream Within a Dream
392:
374:Frances Sargent Osgood
111:
3368:MS. Found in a Bottle
3354:The Duc de L'Omelette
3164:Edgar Allan Poe Poems
3011:In the American Grain
1841:O, Tempora! O, Mores!
1826:
1804:Poems by Edgar A. Poe
1353:Spiritual Song (1836)
1332:
1234:Poems of Edgar A. Poe
1169:Poems by Edgar A. Poe
1114:Further information:
951:Thomas Holley Chivers
929:Poems of Edgar A. Poe
781:Lowell, Massachusetts
745:Lowell, Massachusetts
561:Rufus Wilmot Griswold
533:Thomas Ollive Mabbott
489:
429:
390:
331:"Deep in Earth" is a
242:Thomas Holley Chivers
226:Saturday Evening Post
109:
44:Thomas Ollive Mabbott
3941:The Man with a Cloak
3687:Eureka: A Prose Poem
3680:The Poetic Principle
3578:The Purloined Letter
3564:The Angel of the Odd
3550:The Premature Burial
3452:The Man of the Crowd
2829:(with the full text)
2784:. Indiana University
2735:Chivers' Life of Poe
2695:Silverman, Kenneth.
2015:The Valley of Unrest
1739:Alan Parsons Project
1309:Shakespearean sonnet
1278:Sarah Elmira Royster
1242:James Russell Lowell
941:is described in the
327:Deep in Earth (1847)
303:James Russell Lowell
205:Bridal Ballad (1837)
3881:film and television
3515:The Tell-Tale Heart
3259:The City in the Sea
2746:Mabbott, Thomas O.
1985:The City in the Sea
1961:Sonnet — To Science
1883:Spirits of the Dead
1755:First published in
1677:To My Mother (1849)
1629:William Shakespeare
1597:To M. L. S—— (1847)
1559:To Isaac Lea (1829)
1542:Sarah Helen Whitman
1491:Thomas Willis White
1186:Sarah Helen Whitman
1063:Lines on Ale (1848)
991:The poem parallels
768:on the same day as
636:Evening Star (1827)
551:poem in a modified
464:Arthur Hobson Quinn
273:The Coliseum (1833)
265:The City in the Sea
3988:19th-century poems
3876:In popular culture
3818:Eliza Poe (mother)
3273:The Conqueror Worm
3266:The Haunted Palace
2577:, October 7, 1999.
2515:Quinn, pp. 416-417
2367:Hoffman, pp. 66-67
2292:Hoffman, pp. 31-32
2255:Lines on Joe Locke
2093:The Conqueror Worm
2081:The Haunted Palace
2051:To One in Paradise
1778:A Valentine (1846)
1649:Columbian Magazine
1613:To Margaret (1827)
1335:
1228:The Sleeper (1831)
1079:Lines on Joe Locke
492:
432:
393:
315:The Conqueror Worm
137:Annabel Lee (1849)
120:Scribner's Monthly
112:
33:An Acrostic (1829)
3975:
3974:
3965:The Pale Blue Eye
3487:The Oval Portrait
3245:Sonnet to Science
2411:978-1-4351-0469-3
2153:Beloved Physician
2075:Sonnet — To Zante
1690:To Octavia (1827)
1684:Flag of Our Union
1664:According to the
1577:ten years later.
1471:Graham's Magazine
1378:Graham's Magazine
1290:Sonnet to Science
1099:in October 1889.
1011:Leonard Bernstein
893:Kate Carol was a
770:Flag of Our Union
758:Flag of our Union
678:Fairy-Land (1829)
622:Evangeline (1848)
569:Fordham, New York
537:page on eapoe.org
487:
462:. Poe biographer
445:Graham's Magazine
438:Dream-Land (1844)
427:
388:
369:Graham's Magazine
107:
4005:
3787:The Balloon-Hoax
3571:Thou Art the Man
3445:The Business Man
3198:
3191:
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3161:
3160:
3154:
3130:
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3107:
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2299:
2293:
2290:
1859:The Happiest Day
1792:Anne Lynch Botta
1550:
1454:Broadway Journal
1408:Broadway Journal
1391:Tamerlane (poem)
1385:Tamerlane (1827)
1238:Saturday Courier
1220:Broadway Journal
1215:Saturday Courier
1141:The Raven (1845)
1097:No Name Magazine
1093:Eugene L. Didier
911:Broadway Journal
866:Imitation (1827)
854:Choral composer
840:Broadway Journal
735:For Annie (1849)
692:American Monthly
543:An Enigma (1848)
502:Elizabeth (1829)
488:
451:Broadway Journal
428:
389:
285:John Hill Hewitt
180:Mary-Louise Shew
162:The Bells (poem)
156:The Bells (1848)
108:
77:Al Aaraaf (1829)
4013:
4012:
4008:
4007:
4006:
4004:
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3917:Edgar Allen Poe
3904:
3801:
3795:The Light-House
3766:
3747:
3720:
3693:
3639:
3334:
3216:
3207:
3205:Edgar Allan Poe
3202:
3158:
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3145:Standard Ebooks
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3046:Further reading
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2259:
2249:To F——s S. O——d
2171:To Marie Louise
1919:To The River ——
1829:
1820:American Review
1800:
1784:Evening Mirror'
1780:
1775:
1769:
1753:
1727:Arthur Sullivan
1718:Modernist poet
1713:Saturday Museum
1705:
1697:unrequited love
1692:
1679:
1658:
1641:
1615:
1599:
1583:
1561:
1548:
1538:
1536:To Helen (1848)
1533:
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1525:To Helen (1831)
1480:
1449:
1440:
1438:To —— —— (1829)
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1327:
1305:
1292:
1286:
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1194:
1192:Serenade (1833)
1161:
1158:romantic poetry
1154:
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1118:
1112:
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1065:
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1021:The Lake (1827)
1009:in 1890 and by
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509:To F——s S. O——d
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483:
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479:Eldorado (poem)
475:
473:Eldorado (1848)
440:
423:
421:
415:
395:"A Dream" is a
384:
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364:Edgar Allan Poe
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236:Poe biographer
223:edition of the
213:edition of the
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85:
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35:
26:Edgar Allan Poe
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3998:Lists of poems
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3627:Loss of Breath
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3557:The Oblong Box
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3536:The Spectacles
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3135:External links
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1607:Home Journal'
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1581:To M—— (1828)
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1132:Poetry (1824)
1131:
1129:
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1123:
1117:
1116:Lenore (poem)
1110:A Pæan (1831)
1109:
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1051:Lenore (poem)
1045:Lenore (1843)
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876:foster-father
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865:
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845:Mother of God
842:
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713:Robert Pinsky
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515:Enigma (1833)
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253:A Predicament
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246:Aldous Huxley
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3522:The Gold-Bug
3221:
3214:Bibliography
3163:
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3025:
3019:
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2995:
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2942:Sova, p. 238
2908:
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2866:
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2797:
2786:. Retrieved
2776:
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2473:(2022): 109.
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2297:
2288:
2272:
2243:To My Mother
2213:Lines on Ale
2165:To M. L. S——
2021:The Coliseum
1979:To Isaac Lea
1853:Evening Star
1818:
1816:
1803:
1801:
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1420:To —— (1833)
1413:
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1402:
1399:
1396:To —— (1829)
1376:
1372:
1370:
1358:
1356:
1342:
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1336:
1312:
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1275:
1270:
1265:"Song" is a
1264:
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1201:
1195:
1182:tuberculosis
1172:
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999:Hervey Allen
997:
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973:Thomas Moore
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878:John Allan.
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769:
766:Home Journal
765:
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723:Fanny (1833)
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168:onomatopoeic
165:
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130:
124:
119:
115:
113:
99:Alone (1829)
92:
86:
52:
47:
36:
20:
18:
3968:(2022 film)
3960:(2012 film)
3952:(2004 play)
3944:(1951 film)
3936:(1942 film)
3928:(1915 film)
3920:(1909 film)
3893:Poe Toaster
3843:Poe Cottage
3725:Collections
3329:Annabel Lee
2999:Foye, p. 30
2424:Sova, p. 54
2358:Sova, p. 34
2225:Annabel Lee
2147:A Valentine
2003:The Sleeper
1925:An Acrostic
1901:To Margaret
1741:1976 album
1733:voice with
1709:short story
1619:John Milton
1593:" in 1829.
1261:Song (1827)
1126:anthologies
1122:The Pioneer
1095:in his own
1007:Oliver King
984:George Sale
978:Lalla Rookh
821:Hymn (1835)
592:investments
143:Annabel Lee
3982:Categories
3909:Portrayals
3859:The Stylus
3838:Poe Museum
2788:2011-10-03
2281:References
2207:Evangeline
2111:Dream-Land
1949:Fairy-Land
1907:To Octavia
1671:Anne Lynch
1569:conchology
1247:Christabel
642:lyric poem
539:for more.
397:lyric poem
69:, wife of
59:John Keats
3957:The Raven
3925:The Raven
3322:The Bells
3294:The Raven
3238:Al Aaraaf
3231:Tamerlane
2769:discourse
2640:"LTR-310"
2237:For Annie
2201:An Enigma
2189:The Bells
2135:The Raven
1943:Elizabeth
1931:Al Aaraaf
1895:Tamerlane
1865:Imitation
1666:Baltimore
1565:Isaac Lea
1495:Messenger
1147:The Raven
1017:of 1977.
895:pseudonym
702:John Neal
674:in 1993.
670:into his
496:El Dorado
460:El Dorado
409:in 1829.
188:The Bells
83:Al Aaraaf
67:Xanthippe
55:1818 poem
3861:magazine
3760:Politian
3682:" (1846)
3675:" (1846)
3668:" (1844)
3661:" (1840)
3654:" (1836)
3636:" (1849)
3634:Hop-Frog
3629:" (1846)
3622:" (1846)
3615:" (1845)
3608:" (1845)
3601:" (1845)
3594:" (1845)
3587:" (1845)
3580:" (1844)
3573:" (1844)
3566:" (1844)
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3503:" (1842)
3496:" (1842)
3489:" (1842)
3482:" (1841)
3480:Eleonora
3475:" (1841)
3468:" (1841)
3461:" (1841)
3454:" (1840)
3447:" (1840)
3440:" (1839)
3433:" (1839)
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3419:" (1839)
3412:" (1839)
3405:" (1838)
3398:" (1838)
3391:" (1835)
3384:" (1835)
3377:" (1835)
3375:Berenice
3370:" (1833)
3363:" (1832)
3356:" (1832)
3349:" (1832)
3331:" (1849)
3324:" (1849)
3317:" (1849)
3315:Eldorado
3310:" (1849)
3303:" (1847)
3296:" (1845)
3289:" (1843)
3282:" (1843)
3275:" (1843)
3268:" (1839)
3261:" (1831)
3254:" (1831)
3252:To Helen
3247:" (1829)
3240:" (1829)
3233:" (1827)
3169:LibriVox
2648:Archived
2599: ;
2262:See also
2247:1835/45
2219:To Helen
2195:Eldorado
2039:Serenade
2009:To Helen
1973:To —— ——
1871:The Lake
1645:Virginia
1603:Virginia
1531:To Helen
1499:Virginia
1198:serenade
1015:Songfest
756:journal
749:platonic
337:Virginia
296:Politian
150:Virginia
71:Socrates
39:acrostic
3806:Related
3382:Morella
3361:Bon-Bon
3301:Ulalume
3287:Eulalie
2494:208–209
2183:Ulalume
2099:Eulalie
2087:Silence
1991:Israfel
1955:Romance
1889:Stanzas
1847:A Dream
1810:, part
1773:Ulalume
1432:lullaby
1319:Italian
1177:alcohol
1013:in his
969:Israfil
961:Islamic
939:Israfel
828:Morella
608:Eulalie
565:anagram
348:Eulalie
333:couplet
292:Visiter
192:stanzas
3798:(1849)
3790:(1844)
3782:(1839)
3763:(1835)
3744:(1840)
3736:(1827)
3717:(1840)
3709:(1837)
3698:Novels
3690:(1848)
3644:Essays
3396:Ligeia
3280:Lenore
3123:
3100:
3081:
3062:
3032:
2960:
2921:
2888:
2810:
2703:
2555:
2448:
2408:
2342:
2141:To F——
2105:Lenore
2027:Enigma
1997:A Pæan
1913:To M——
1839:1825?
1835:Poetry
1631:, and
1296:sonnet
1267:ballad
1057:A Pæan
965:Qu'ran
553:sonnet
549:riddle
321:Ligeia
3886:music
3866:Death
3771:Other
3339:Tales
3222:Poems
2241:1849
2235:1849
2229:1849
2223:1849
2217:1848
2211:1848
2205:1848
2199:1848
2193:1848
2187:1848
2181:1847
2175:1847
2169:1847
2163:1847
2157:1847
2151:1847
2145:1846
2139:1845
2133:1845
2127:1845
2121:1845
2115:1845
2109:1844
2103:1843
2097:1843
2091:1843
2085:1839
2079:1839
2073:1837
2067:1837
2061:1836
2055:1835
2049:1833
2045:To ——
2043:1833
2037:1833
2033:Fanny
2031:1833
2025:1833
2019:1833
2013:1831
2007:1831
2001:1831
1995:1831
1989:1831
1983:1831
1977:1829
1971:1829
1967:To ——
1965:1829
1959:1829
1953:1829
1947:1829
1941:1829
1937:Alone
1935:1829
1929:1829
1923:1829
1917:1828
1911:1828
1905:1827
1899:1827
1893:1827
1887:1827
1881:1827
1875:1827
1869:1827
1863:1827
1857:1827
1851:1827
1845:1827
1833:1824
1812:angel
1808:Satan
1735:piano
1731:tenor
1591:Alone
1549:'
1347:grave
1249:" by
1196:This
988:Houri
943:Koran
650:stars
640:This
596:banks
525:Homer
231:bride
184:nurse
116:Alone
89:Quran
22:poems
3752:Play
3121:ISBN
3098:ISBN
3079:ISBN
3060:ISBN
3030:ISBN
2958:ISBN
2919:ISBN
2886:ISBN
2808:ISBN
2701:ISBN
2553:ISBN
2446:ISBN
2406:ISBN
2340:ISBN
2057:Hymn
1877:Song
1035:lake
947:lute
903:eyes
897:for
594:and
221:1841
211:1837
182:, a
3143:at
2987:210
2858:154
2766:In
2442:328
2312:204
1621:'s
1073:ale
1059:".
975:'s
885:".
511:."
255:".
131:was
57:by
3984::
2933:^
2917:.
2915:11
2711:^
2646:.
2642:.
2471:55
2469:.
2444:.
2387:37
2253:?
1763:.
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1715:.
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1627:,
1555:.
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1434:.
1307:A
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547:A
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