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From Out that Shadow: The Life and Legacy of Edgar Allan Poe 1. Timeline and exhibition intro information About this Exhibition Illustrations 2. Poe’s life and Works • Poe’s Early Years • The Working Writer • Poe and Science • Poe in Love 3. Poe’s Genres • Poe the Poet • Poe and Detective Fiction • Poe the Critic • The Raven • Dore’s Raven 4. Death and Legacy • Death and Infamy • Poe in France • Perspectives on Poe • Popular Poe 5. The Haunted Mind (wall items only) 6. Portraits (wall and vitrine items only) 7. unaffiliated items From Out That Shadow: The Life and Legacy of Edgar Allan Poe A Bicentennial Exhibition at the Small Special Collections Library at the University of Virginia, Charlottesville, and the Harry Ransom Center at the University of Texas at Austin And the Raven, never flitting, still is sitting, still is sitting On the pallid bust of Pallas just above my chamber door; And his eyes have all the seeming of a demon's that is dreaming, And the lamp-light o'er him streaming throws his shadow on the floor; And my soul from out that shadow that lies floating on the floor Shall be lifted—nevermore! —“The Raven” Poet, literary critic, visionary, inventor of the detective story, master of the macabre: this was Edgar Allan Poe. One of the most important and widely read American authors of the nineteenth century, Poe still fascinates schoolchildren and scholars alike. His poem “The Raven” is among the most memorable in the language, and his highly original tales continue to amaze and terrify. Darkness, anxiety, and obsession are the stuff of Poe’s works—and of his life. This exhibition sheds light on Poe’s education, his career as a journalist, his tumultuous relationships with women, and his tragic early death. Orphaned at an early age, Poe briefly attended the University of Virginia and West Point Academy, publishing his first work in 1827. For the rest of his life, Poe made his living as a writer and editor but was constantly in debt and plagued by personal tragedy and literary scandal. Having endured his young wife’s death, Poe himself died under mysterious circumstances at the age of forty. On his 200th birthday, Poe lives on. His literary reputation survived the premature burial given him by his literary executor, Rufus Griswold; the admiration of French writers kept him before the public eye. Later, he became widely appreciated in his own country and around the world. Poe’s insights into the shadowy places of the human mind have inspired some of the finest illustrators, including Edouard Manet and Arthur Rackham, whose work is featured here. Text Panel: The Poe Collections Most of the items in the exhibition from the Harry Ransom Center collections once belonged to William H. Koester (1888-1964). Koester, a resident of Baltimore, began collecting first editions and manuscripts of Poe in the 1930s. He acquired the collection of the earlier Poe scholar and collector J. H. Whitty. In addition to the manuscripts of “The Domain of Arnheim,” “The Spectacles,” and portions of Poe’s most famous poems, the Koester collection includes many letters written by and to Poe, books belonging to Poe (including the author’s heavily annotated copies of the Tales and Poems and Eureka), and a large group of sheet music for songs based on Poe’s works. The Koester Collection was acquired by the Center in 1966. John Henry Ingram (1842-1916), biographer, editor, and champion of kEdgar Allan Poe, corresponded with Poe’s friends and family and assembled a significant collection of letters, manuscripts, photographs, and printed materials. The University of Virginia acquired the collection in 1922. Other Poe materials are part of the Clifton Waller Barrett Library of American Literature at Virginia. The Edgar Allan Poe Digital Collection on the Ransom Center web site combines images of Poe manuscripts and letters at the Ransom Center with a selection of related archival materials, copies of book annotated by the author, sheet music based on poems by Poe, and related materials from the University of Texas collections. 197 “The Buried Treasury of Edgar Allan Poe” in The Baltimore Sun, January 18, 1953 Digital reproduction Koester Poe Collection 118 [original item used for exhibition identity] Bernhardt Wall (American, 1872-1956) Portrait of Edgar Allan Poe, 1919 Etching, drypoint Koester Poe Collection Timeline: not included in this document. visible only in exhibition Illustrations of Poe’s Works The rich history of illustrating Poe’s works, particularly “The Raven” and the short stories, could easily be the subject of a separate exhibition. Throughout this exhibition are to be found original work by Arthur Rackham, Edmund Dulac, Gustave Doré, and the largely unknown Irish-American artist James William Carling, whose melodramatic illustrations for The Raven are his only significant work. At their best, Carling’s forty-three drawings (usually displayed together in the Poe Museum in Richmond) capture the darkness and terror of the poem. Of particular interest is the set of original watercolors and pen and ink drawings by Arthur Rackham, one of the most celebrated illustrators of the last century, who contributed the artwork for an edition of Poe’s Tales of Mystery and Imagination in 1935. These illustrations, which may be seen throughout the exhibition, show Rackham’s particular affinity for the element of the grotesque in Poe. The Rackham illustrations form part of the Koester Poe Collection at the Ransom Center. 146, 147 Arthur Rackham (1867-1939) The dust jacket illustration for Edgar Allan Poe’s Tales of Mystery & Imagination (London: G. Harrap, 1935) Charcoal, ink, and gouache Koester Poe Collection The printed dust jacket of Edgar Allan Poe’s Tales of Mystery & Imagination (London: G. Harrap, 1935) Koester Poe Collection 124, 125 Arthur Rackham (1867-1939) The cloth binding design for Edgar Allan Poe’s Tales of Mystery & Imagination (London: G. Harrap, 1935) Koester Poe Collection Arthur Rackham (1867-1939) The title page of Edgar Allan Poe’s Tales of Mystery & Imagination (London: G. Harrap, 1935) Pen and ink Koester Poe Collection 123 Arthur Rackham (American, 1867-1939) An illustration for the spine of Edgar Allan Poe’s Tales of Mystery & Imagination (London: G. Harrap, 1935) Pen and ink Koester Poe Collection Text Panel: Poe’s Life and Career Poe’s personal and professional lives were suffused with struggle. Orphaned at an early age, Poe was taken in by Richmond merchant John Allan, who had little ability to nurture his foster son’s talents. The two often found themselves at loggerheads. Poe’s rebelliousness led to his departures from the University of Virginia, West Point Academy, and the U.S. Army, despite his intelligence and love of learning. Poe found his poetic voice at an early age with the publication of Tamerlane and Other Poems (1827). Despite his considerable talents and capacity for hard work, Poe struggled to find a steady source of income for his family as an editor or government appointee. He earned a precarious living from his occasional writings, reviews, and tales, which brought him a measure of literary recognition and brief periods of relative prosperity. Poe’s tendency to avenge slights—real or imagined—in print and his sense of being an outsider kept him from being fully accepted by the American literary establishment, though he knew and corresponded with most of its important figures. Poe’s relationships with women were likewise intense and often tumultuous. His ethereal, child-like cousin Virginia, whom he married in 1836 and who died of tuberculosis in 1847, was the great love of his life. Her mother (and Poe’s aunt), his beloved “Muddy,” served as a substitute for the real mother he had lost in infancy. Poe cut a dashing figure in the literary salons of the 1840s. Following Virginia’s death, he formed several romantic attachments, all of which were ultimately undermined by his drinking and emotional problems. Poe’s Early Years Edgar Poe was born in Boston on January 19, 1809, the child of David and Eliza Poe. The following year, David Poe abandoned his family. In 1811, Eliza Poe’s health began to fail, possibly due to tuberculosis, and she died that December. Orphaned before his third birthday, Poe was taken in by John and Frances Allan of Richmond; his brother and his sister went to live with other families. Although the Allans never formally adopted him, they gave him the name Edgar Allan Poe. John Allan emphasized education, funding boarding school for Poe during the years the Allans lived in England (1815-1820); he sent Poe to the University of Virginia upon the family’s return to Richmond. William Wertenbaker, the University’s Librarian, later recalled a sober, quiet, and orderly young man whom he never witnessed “in the slightest degree under the influence of intoxicating liquors.” Allan’s paltry financial support—a circumstance that caused increasing friction between the two men—led Poe deep into debt, until he could no longer remain at the University. Many years later, Rufus Griswold’s vindictive and inaccurate obituary of Poe would state that Poe was expelled for his dissolute ways. Upon Poe’s return to Richmond, he and Allan continued to quarrel, until Poe left the Allan home for good and moved to Boston. Finding it difficult to support himself as a writer, he enlisted first in the Army and then entered the U.S. Military Academy at West Point. Neither of these ventures succeeded, and Poe’s life-long pattern of financial instability was firmly established. 26 A playbill for a performance of Mysteries of the Castle and He Wou’d Be a Soldier at the Theater Royal, Covent Garden, England, 1795 Playbills and Programs Collection Poe’s mother Eliza Arnold Poe was the daughter of English actors. Her mother Elizabeth, “Mrs. Arnold,” is listed as here as one of the players in this London performance. Eliza and her mother sailed to America in late 1795. 156, 78 Sir William Charles Ross Eliza Poe, 19th century Koester Poe Collection Portrait of Eliza Poe on ivory, date unknown The Richard Gimbel Collection Rare Book Department, Free Library of Philadelphia Poe’s mother Eliza Arnold Poe made her stage debut at the age of nine. In her brief life, she played nearly three hundred roles and performed in theaters in Boston, New York, Philadelphia, and Richmond. She acted until a few days before his birth and resumed work three weeks afterward. Theater reviewers praised her talents and often noted her petite figure and large, dark eyes. Onstage, she sang, danced, and played dramatic roles—such as Shakespeare’s Juliet and Ophelia. She died at the age of twenty- four. Ross based his portrait on the only known likeness of Eliza Poe, displayed here. This miniature was left to Edgar after her death and likely was in his possession when he died in 1849. 1, 27 The libretto for Michael Kelly’s Cinderella, or The little glass slipper: A grand allegorical pantomimic spectacle. (Boston: Printed for John West, 1807) Inscribed “D. Poe” Koester Poe Collection John Tobin’s The curfew: a play, in five acts (London: Printed for Richard Phillips, 1807) Inscribed N. L. Usher, with contents note on the cover in Edgar Allan Poe’s hand, and a change in the dramatis personae in David Poe’s hand Koester Poe Collection Poe’s father and mother both worked as touring actors. Eliza Poe’s talents often outshone her husband’s when they performed together. Reviewing one of her performances, a critic noted that “Mrs. Poe’s name is a brilliant gem in the theatric crown” and claimed that no other actress “has received more than she of the public applause.” David’s performances, however, earned a reputation for dullness: “a footman,” one New York review explained, “is the extent of what he ought to attempt.” 25 H. Clarke’s Fabulæ Æsopi selectæ, or, Select fables of Æsop: with an English translation, more literal than any yet extant, designed for the readier instruction of beginners in the Latin tongue (Baltimore: Joseph Cushing, 1817) Koester Poe Collection The inscription in this copy reads “Edgar A. Poe’s copy,” in what appears to be the writer’s juvenile signature. Poe later excelled in Latin as a student at the University of Virginia. His short stay at the university is documented on the wall nearby. 165 An official copy of the proceedings of the trial of Cadet E. A. Poe of the United States Military Academy, January 1, 1831 John Henry Ingram’s Poe Collection Special Collections, U.Va. Library Deliberately flaunting rules at West Point in order to get court-martialed, Poe was charged with “gross neglect of duty” and “disobedience of orders.” He pled guilty to the charges and was discharged from the Academy. Wall: 75 Edgar Allan Poe’s entry in the University of Virginia matriculation book, 1825-1855, University Archives, Special Collections, U.Va. Library Digital Reproduction This book documents Poe’s enrollment in February 1826, one year after the first session of classes at Thomas Jefferson’s university commenced. Although no records document any meeting between the two men, Jefferson made visits to the university to supervise progress on buildings—such as the nearly complete Rotunda—until a month before his death in July 1826. Poe’s entry is at the very bottom of the page; he was one of 177 students that year. 76 A list of library fines, including Edgar Allan Poe’s overdue fine, August 11, 1826 University Archives, Special Collections, U.Va. Library As a student, Poe borrowed library books on ancient and American history and two volumes of Voltaire. This list indicates that Poe’s failure to return Charles Rollin’s Ancient History on time resulted in a sixty-cent fine. 79 A letter from Edgar Allan Poe to John Allan, January 3, 1831 Valentine Richmond History Center, Richmond, Va. Digital Reproduction Writing from West Point, Poe outlines the costs of attending the University of Virginia, demonstrating how it would have been impossible to avoid getting into debt. Railing against Allan’s parsimony, Poe blames Allan for all of the “difficulties in which I was involved in Charlottesville.” He also writes of having “no one on Earth who cared for me, or loved me.” After several years of increasingly bitter difficulties, the rift between the two men became irreparable. 100 A page from Alexandre Dumas’s autograph manuscript account of Poe’s visit to Paris, date unknown The Richard Gimbel Collection Rare Book Department, Free Library of Philadelphia Scholars have been baffled by the lack of any documentary evidence for Poe’s whereabouts in 1832. One theory is that Poe traveled to Paris. Dumas compellingly relates an account of Poe as his house guest in Paris in 1832. The French author’s description of Poe bears an uncanny similarity to Poe’s fictional detective Auguste Dupin: Poe had one curious idiosyncrasy; he liked the night better than the day. Indeed his love of the darkness amounted to a passion….As soon as day began to break, he hermetically sealed up the windows of his room and lit a couple of candles. In the midst of this pale illumination he worked…But as soon as the clock told him that the real darkness had come, he would come in for me, take me out with him if I was there….In these rambles, I could not help remarking with wonder and admiration...the extraordinary faculty of analysis exhibited by my friend….He made no secret of the enjoyment he derived from it and would remark with a smile of proud satisfaction, that, for him, every man had an open window where his heart was. The Working Writer Throughout his career, Poe struggled to make a living from his writing, publishing a steady stream of short fiction, criticism, and poems in magazines, newspapers, and the popular new literary anthologies, or “gift books.” These efforts produced a modest income and made Poe’s name known among the literati. His sharp critical style, fantastical and ingenious short stories, and the enormously popular poem “The Raven,” first published in early 1845, brought him wider fame at a national level. Despite these successes, he often managed to alienate those who could help him most by engaging in a variety of literary disputes. For most of his life, Poe dreamed of founding a magazine of his own which would insure a steady income and in which he could promote his literary and esthetic theories. But literary magazines were expensive propositions. His efforts to find backers repeatedly failed, and he had to earn his living by writing on all manner of subjects for such magazines as The Southern Literary Messenger, Graham’s, and The Broadway Journal. His financial struggles also led him to search for government posts that never materialized. 6 The first page of a letter from Edgar Allan Poe to John Beauchamp Jones, August 8, 1839 Koester Poe Collection From May 1839 to May 1840 Poe was assistant editor for Burton’s Gentleman’s Magazine, owned by the actor William Evans “Billy” Burton. Poe published two of his best-known stories, “The Fall of the House of Usher” and “William Wilson” in Burton’s. John Beauchamp Jones was a Baltimore journalist and Burton’s contributor who had written to Poe to inform him of some sharp criticism of Burton’s in the Baltimore Sun. The Sun implied that Burton’s suffered because of Billy Burton’s theatrical engagements in New York, claiming that as a result, “although this number contains many excellent articles, there is a palpable want of tact in the manner in which it has been gotten up.” 7 A letter from Edgar Allan Poe to Robert Hamilton, October 3, 1842 Koester Poe Collection In this letter, Poe complains to Hamilton, editor of the Ladies’ Companion, about typographical errors made in the printing of his story “The Landscape-Garden” (this story later became “The Domain of Arnheim”). As a critic, Poe was notorious for seizing on small imperfections, so he was understandably sensitive to typographical errors in his own works. Here, Poe remarks that he is “as straight as judges,” an apparent allusion to his drinking bout in New York the previous June, when, despondent over his wife Virginia’s illness from tuberculosis, he paid a drunken visit to a former love, Mary (Starr) Devereux. 8 A manuscript of Edgar Allan Poe’s short story “The Spectacles,” ca. 1844 Koester Poe Collection In 1844 Poe submitted a manuscript of his story “The Spectacles” to the English poet Richard Henry Horne in hopes that Horne would sell it for Poe to a London magazine. Horne was repulsed by this story of a young man who becomes engaged to his great- great-grandmother because he is too vain to wear spectacles. It was eventually published in several American magazines and later pirated by the London magazine Lloyd’s Entertaining Journal. This fair copy in Poe’s meticulous hand is probably the original manuscript submitted to Horne. 14 The first page of a letter from Edgar Allan Poe to Charles West Thomson, and a prospectus for Poe’s proposed Penn Magazine, June 28, 1840 [?] Digital reproduction of the prospectus Koester Poe Collection In this letter, Poe solicits financial backing for his proposed Penn Magazine from Thomson, a Philadelphia poet. Poe also wrote to several key American men of letters— Washington Irving, James Fenimore Cooper, William Cullen Bryant, and Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, most of whom he had attacked either publicly or privately— describing his plans and asking these writers to contribute to the magazine regularly. The Penn never materialized. In 1842 Poe began to plan for another magazine, the Stylus. He briefly acquired a backer who pulled out due to his own financial issues and concerns about Poe’s drinking. 15 A letter from Edgar Allan Poe to Lea & Blanchard, August 13, 1841 Koester Poe Collection Lea & Blanchard, publishers of Poe’s Tales of the Grotesque and Arabesque in December 1839, declined the offer Poe made in this letter, noting that that volume had not yet sold. As Lea & Blanchard had written to Poe in September 1839, they would publish Tales “at our own risque and expense” and noted that “if sold—[the edition] will pay but a small profit which if realized is to be ours,” while granting Poe the copyright. 22 The first page of a letter from Edgar Allan Poe to Frederick W. Thomas, May 25, 1842 Koester Poe Collection Frederick William Thomas was a novelist and poet who became friendly with Poe in 1840. In May 1842 Thomas wrote to Poe suggesting that Thomas use his influence with Robert Tyler, the President’s son, to secure a position for Poe in the Philadelphia Custom House. After months of uncertainty, Poe traveled to Washington in March 1843 to press his case and to solicit contributors to his proposed Stylus magazine, but Poe did not receive the position. Custom House positions offered an aspiring literary man income and time for writing. Nathaniel Hawthorne and Herman Melville, among others, held such positions (see, for example, Hawthorne’s famous “Custom House” preface to The Scarlet Letter). 28 Nicholas Rowe’s Tamerlane: A Tragedy, 3rd ed. (London: Printed for Jacob Tonson, 1714) Koester Poe Collection This copy of Nicholas Rowe’s Tamerlane belonged to John Allan, Edgar Allan Poe’s foster father. Rowe’s work, describing the exploits of a peace-loving Asian conqueror

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And my soul from out that shadow that lies floating on the floor. Shall be lifted—nevermore! .. great-grandmother because he is too vain to wear spectacles. It was eventually Hague: Mouton, 1951). Lithograph. Koester Poe
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Most books are stored in the elastic cloud where traffic is expensive. For this reason, we have a limit on daily download.