Edgar Allan Poe
Famous as | Author, Poet, Editor and Literary Critic |
Born on | 19 January 1809 |
Born in | Boston, Massachusetts |
Died on | 07 October 1849 |
Nationality | United States |
Works & Achievements | Inventor of the detective-fiction genre, Famous for his poetry like, "The Raven" and "Annabel Lee". |
Edgar Allan Poe Childhood & Early Life
Edgar Allan Poe was born on January 19, 1809 in Boston, Massachusetts. His parents
were actor David Poe, Jr. and actress Elizabeth Arnold Hopkins Poe. He
had two siblings, one elder brother, William Henry Leonard Poe and a
younger sister Rosalie Poe. Poe’s father abandoned their family in 1810
and the following year his mother died from pulmonary tuberculosis. Poe
was raised by John Allan, a successful Scottish merchant in Richmond,
Virginia. John Allan had business of tobacco, cloth, wheat, tombstones,
and slaves. Poe was baptized in the Episcopal Church in 1812. The family
sailed to Britain in 1815, where Poe attended the grammar school in
Irvine, Scotland. He rejoined his family in London in 1816. Until summer
1817, he studied at a boarding school in Chelsea. He also studied at
the Reverend John Bransby’s Manor House School at Stoke Newington. Poe
traveled to Richmond, Virginia in 1820. In 1824, in the celebration of
the visit of Marquis de Lafayette in Richmond, he served as the
lieutenant of the Richmond youth honor guard.
The death of John Allan’s wealthy uncle, William Galt in March
1825, left Allan an inheritance of several acres of real estate worth an
estimated $750,000. Meanwhile, Poe was engaged to Sarah Elmira Royster.
In February 1826, he left for University of Virginia to study
languages. The University was newly founded and was based on the ideals
of Thomas Jefferson. There were strict rules against gambling, horses,
guns, tobacco and alcohol but were generally ignored. During his stay in the
University, he became distant with Royster and also became increasingly
habitual to gambling. His gambling debts made him estranged from his
foster father. Poe even claimed that he was not given sufficient money
to register for classes, purchase texts, and procure and furnish a
dormitory. The additional money that was given to him for clothes was
also spent on gambling, with the debts stacking. After a year, Poe
dropped out from the University. He didn’t want to return to Richmond
after knowing that his love, Royster was married to Alexander Shelton
and so traveled to Boston, instead, in April 1827. In Boston, he did
variety of odd jobs such as a clerk and newspaper writer. For a while,
he even started using pseudonym Henri Le Rennet.
Career
In May, 1827, Poe was enlisted in United States Army as a private.
He registered himself with the name, Edgar A. Perry of age 22. His first
posting was in Fort Independence in Boston Harbor and was paid with a
salary of five dollars a month. In 1827, he published his first book,
“Tamerlane and Other Poems”, which was a forty page poetry collection.
His regiment was posted to Fort Moultrie in Charleston, South Carolina,
wherein he was promoted to the rank of "artificer", an enlisted
tradesman who prepared shells for artillery. He served for another two
years and held the rank of Sergeant Major for Artillery. Before the
completion of his five-year enlistment, Poe revealed his true name and
his circumstances to his commanding officer, Lieutenant Howard. Howard
was ready to discharge him on one condition; Poe should reconcile with
his foster father John Allan and write a letter to him. Poe was finally
discharged from the Army on April 15, 1829.
Poe went to Baltimore to stay with his widowed aunt Maria Clemm,
her daughter, Virginia Eliza Clemm and his brother Henry. In 1829,
during his stay in Baltimore, Poe published his second book,
“Al Aaraaf, Tamerlane and Minor Poems”. He traveled to West Point,
where he matriculated as a cadet on July 1, 1830. His foster father John
Allan married his second wife, Louisa Patterson in October 1830.
Following some serious quarrels with his father over Allan’s
illegitimate children, Poe was disowned by John Allan. Poe left West
Point by purposely getting court-martialed. He left for New York in
February 1831, where he published his third volume of poems, “Poems”.
This book was financed by his fellow cadets at West Point which had
collected a total donation of $170. Printed by Elam Bliss of New York,
the book was a dedication to the U.S. Corps of Cadets. In March 1831, he
returned to Baltimore to his aunt, brother and cousin. His brother fell
seriously ill due to his alcoholic habits and died on August 1, 1831.
Later Life
Following his brother’s death, Poe started concentrating on his
career as a writer. He was perhaps the first known writer in the America
to live on writing only. Although the periodicals in America were
having a booming growth, they were constantly hampered by lack of
International Copyright laws. Writers were paid poorly by their
publishers, which caused financial problems to Poe. After his earlier
attempts as a poet, he started writing prose. Poe placed some of his
stories with Philadelphia publication and even started writing a drama,
“Politian”. In October 1833, he was awarded with a prize by Baltimore
Saturday Visiter for his short story, “MS. Found in a Bottle”. This
story was liked by John P. Kennedy which introduced Poe to Thomas W.
White, editor of the Southern Literary Messenger in Richmond. In August
1835, Poe became the assistant editor of the periodical, but was
discharged after few weeks for being drunk during office hours. He was
reinstated to the job after his promise of good behavior. He stayed in
the Messenger until 1837. During this period, he published numerous
stories, poems, book reviews in the paper.
In 1839, Poe became the assistant editor of Burton's Gentleman's
Magazine. The same year he published the collection “Tales of the Grotesque
and Arabesque” in two volumes, which received mixed reviews. After
working in Burton’s for one year, he joined Graham's Magazine as an
assistant. Just as he realized that he had contracted tuberculosis, Poe
started drinking alcohol to relieve his stress. He left Graham’s and
came back to New York. In New York, he worked at the Evening Mirror for a
brief time before becoming the editor of the Broadway Journal. His
public accusation of Henry Wadsworth Longfellow of plagiarism left him
alienated from other writers. On January 1845, his famous poem, “The
Raven” appeared in the Evening Mirror, which made him instantly popular
among the masses. This poem was concurrently published in the American
Review: A Whig Journal under the pseudonym “Quarles”. After the failure
of “The Broadway Journal” in 1846, Poe moved to the Fordham section of
The Bronx, New York.
Personal Life
Poe secretly married his cousin, Virginia Clemm on September 22,
1835. However, her death on January 30, 1847 made Poe increasingly
unstable. He tried to court the poet Sarah Helen Whitman, but failed. He
returned to Richmond, where he resumed his relationship with his
childhood love, Sarah Elmira Royster.
Death
Poe was found in a miserable state in on the streets of Baltimore,
on October 3, 1849. He was taken to the Washington College Hospital,
where he breathed his last on October 7, 1849.
| ||||
Edgar Allan Poe Timeline: | ||||
1809: Was born in Boston, Massachusetts.
1811: His mother died.
1812: He was baptized in the Episcopal Church.
1815: The family sailed to Britain, attended the grammar school in Irvine, Scotland.
1820: Traveled to Richmond, Virginia.
1824: Served as the lieutenant of the Richmond youth honor guard in the celebration of the visit of Marquis de Lafayette in Richmond.
1826: Left for University of Virginia to study languages.
1827: Traveled to Boston, was enlisted in United States Army as a private, and published his first book, Tamerlane and Other Poems.
1829: Was finally discharged from the Army, went
to Baltimore to his aunt and published his second book, Al Aaraaf,
Tamerlane and Minor Poems.
1830: Traveled to West Point where he matriculated as a cadet.
1831: Moved to New York, published his third volume of poems, Poems.
1833: He was awarded with a prize by Baltimore Saturday Visiter for his short story, “MS. Found in a Bottle”.
1835: Became the assistant editor of the Southern Literary Messenger, married to his cousin Virginia Clemm.
1839: Became the assistant editor of Burton's Gentleman's Magazine.
1845: His famous poem, “The Raven” appeared in the Evening Mirror.
1846: Moved to the Fordham section of The Bronx, New York.
1847: His wife died.
1849: He died in Baltimore, Maryland.
|
0 comments:
Post a Comment