First, I am going to propose what a researcher might have to do to conduct a comprehensive study of Poe’s 1848 book, Eureka: A Prose Poem. Then, I am going to explain why I decided not to fall into the trap of attempting to evaluate Poe's final work. As I noted in my previous Poe and Science Blogs, in 2012 and 2013 , I attempted to design a Prospectus on Eureka for my M.A. Thesis in English Literature at the Virginia Commonwealth University. To that end, I worked with Chris Semtner at the Edgar Allan Poe Museum in Richmond and several professors at VCU putting ...
Poe's Works
The Critic Who Burned “Fairy-Land”
Editor Nathaniel Parker Willis once burned a manuscript of Poe's "Fairy-Land." That seems like pretty harsh treatment from a literary editor; and we wonder why such atmospheric lines as "Dim vales-and shadowy floods- / And cloudy-looking woods" might receive such severe critical feedback? The answer lies in comparing the poem we commonly know with its alternative publishing in Poe's anthology of poems in 1831.
It was no secret that Poe was always at work altering lines and switching words-"Fairy-Land" was no exception.
Our readers may be familiar with the classic verse, which reads,
Dim ...
“Lines on Ale” and Other Misattributed Poems
I recently came across a curious poem in a Poe anthology entitled "To Isadore." I was not familiar with it, but it certainly sounded like Poe's voice throughout the stanzas, at least so I thought. The publishers sure fooled me, for lo' and behold, it was deemed as being misattributed to Poe and it had been confirmed that it was not a Poe poem (Mabbott 509). What concerned me most about this situation was that there remain to be slipups even among our popular publishers today. The anthology I found this poem in will go unnamed; however, this post is meant to bring awareness to a few commonly ...
Poe as America’s Unabashed Critic
Poe was notorious for being a harsh critic-he was nicknamed the "Tomahawk Man," after all. But are you familiar with these particular criticisms?
Check these out:
1) Poe once told a guy to shoot himself. According to Poe scholar Chris Semtner in his book Edgar Allan Poe's Richmond, Poe wrote a review of author Langston Osbourne's book, Confessions of a Poet in an 1835 issue of the Southern Literary Messenger. First off, let us explain that the author had included a couple of sentences in his preface explaining that he'd had a gun on standby so he could shoot himself upon the book's ...