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by James Southall Wilson

dgar Allan Poe was born January 19, 1809
in Boston, where his mother had been employed as an actress.
Elizabeth Arnold Poe died in Richmond on December 8, 1811,
and Edgar was taken into the family of John Allan, a member
of the firm of Ellis and Allan, tobacco-merchants.
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| Poe's mother, Elizabeth
Arnold Poe, died in Richmond on December 8, 1811. |
After attending schools in England and Richmond,
young Poe registered at the University of Virginia on February
14, 1826, the second session of the University. He lived in
Room 13, West Range. He became an active member of the Jefferson
Literary Society, and passed his courses with good grades
at the end of the session in December. Mr. Allan failed to
give him enough money for necessary expenses, and Poe made
debts of which his so-called father did not approve. When
Mr. Allan refused to let him return to the University, a quarrel
ensued, and Poe was driven from the Allan home without money.
Mr. Allan probably sent him a little money later, and Poe
went to Boston. There he published a little volume of poetry,
Tamerlane and Other Poems. It is such a rare book now that
a single copy has sold for $200,000.00
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| Moldavia, Poe's
last home in Richmond located at Fifth and Main Streets.
John Allan bought the house in 1825, and Edgar lived there
before entering the University of Virginia in 1826. |
In Boston on May 26, 1827, Poe enlisted
in The United States Army as a private using the name Edgar
A. Perry. After two years of service, during which he was
promoted to the rank of Sergeant-major, he secured, with Mr.
Allan's aid, a discharge from the Army and went to Baltimore.
He lived there with his aunt, Mrs. Maria Poe Clemm, on the
small amounts of money sent by Mr. Allan until he received
an appointment to the U.S. Military Academy at West Point.
Meanwhile, Poe published a second book of
poetry in 1829: Al Aaraaf, Tamerlane and Minor Poems. After
another quarrel with Allan (who had married a second wife
in 1830), Poe no longer received aid from his foster father.
Poe then took the only method of release from the Academy,
and got himself dismissed on March 6, 1831.
Soon after Poe left West Point, a third
volume appeared: Poems by Edgar Allan Poe, Second Edition.
While living in Baltimore with his aunt, Mrs. Clemm, young
Poe began writing prose tales. Five of these appeared in the
Philadelphia Saturday Courier in 1832.
With the December issue of 1835, Poe began
editing the Southern Literary Messenger for Thomas W. White
in Richmond; he held this position until January, 1837. During
this time, Poe married his young cousin, Virginia Clemm in
Richmond on May 16, 1836.
Poe's slashing reviews and sensational tales
made him widely known as an author; however, he failed to
find a publisher for a volume of burlesque tales, Tales of
the Folio Club. Harpers did, however, print his book-length
narrative, Arthur Gordon Pym in July of 1838.
Little is known about Poe's life after he
left the Messenger; however, in 1838 he went to Philadelphia
where he lived for six years. He was an editor of Burton's
Gentleman's Magazine from July, 1839 to June, 1840, and of
Graham's Magazine from April, 1841 to May, 1842. In April,
1844, with barely car fare for his family of three, [including
his aunt, Virginia's mother, who lived with them], Poe went
to New York where he found work on the New York Evening Mirror.
In 1840, Poe's Tales of the Grotesque and
Arabesque was published in two volumes in Philadelphia. In
1845, Poe became famous with the spectacular success of his
poem "The Raven," and in March of that year, he
joined C. F. Briggs in an effort to publish The Broadway Journal.
Also in 1845,Wiley and Putnam issued Tales by Edgar A. Poe
and The Raven and Other Poems.
The year 1846 was a tragic one. Poe rented
the little cottage at Fordham, where he lived the last three
years of his life. The Broadway Journal failed, and Virginia
became very ill and died on January 30, 1847. After his wife's
death, Poe perhaps yielded more often to a weakness for drink,
which had beset him at intervals since early manhood. He was
unable to take even a little alcohol without a change of personality,
and any excess was accompanied by physical prostration. Throughout
his life those illnesses had interfered with his success
as an editor, and had given him a reputation for intemperateness
that he scarcely deserved.
In his latter years, Poe was interested
in several women. They included the poetess, Mrs. Sarah Helen
Whitman, Mrs. Charles Richmond, and the widow, Mrs. Sarah
Elmira Shelton, whom he had known in his boyhood as Miss Royster.
The circumstances of Poe's death remain
a mystery. After a visit to Norfolk and Richmond for lectures,
he was found in Baltimore in a pitiable condition and taken
unconscious to a hospital where he died on Sunday, October
7, 1849. He was buried in the yard of Westminster Presbyterian
Church in Baltimore, Maryland.
In personal appearance,
Poe was a quiet, shy-looking but handsome man; he was slightly
built, and was five feet, eight inches in height. His mouth
was considered beautiful. His eyes, with long dark lashes,
were hazel-gray.
 
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