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Edgar Allan Poe Edgar Allan Poe was born in Boston on January 19, 1809.
Orphaned at the age of three, Edgar was sent to a foster home where he lived
with the Allans in Richmond, VA until he married his thirteen-year-old cousin,
Virginia Clemm. Throughout his youth, Edgar experienced rocky relations with the
Allans and was eventually disowned before his marriage. (Compton's, pp. 401-02)
Edgar Allan Poe's short stories and poems induce disturbing emotions which stem
from an unstable childhood as a result of a disjointed family life. After
leaving his broken foster home, Poe enlisted in the army under the name Edgar A.
Perry in 1827. Aspiring to become an officer in hopes to regain favor with Mr.
Allan, Poe was granted an honorable discharge and sought an appointment at West
Point. (Forrest, P., Who Was Poe?) While waiting for over a year to hear from
the school, Poe resided with his widowed aunt, Ms. Maria Clemm in Baltimore. In
1830, Poe was sworn in as a cadet. However, the death of his foster mother led
to Mr. Allan's remarriage and Poe's exclusion from the family will. Upon
receiving such news, Poe deliberately neglected his classes and was expelled
from West Point after only eight months of study.
His writing career began soon
after when he won a short story contest in 1833 and became a literary critic for
The Southern Literary Messenger. Later writing opportunities brought Poe a small
income, which paved the way for his marriage to Virginia Clemm in 1835.
(Compton's, pp. 401-02) Virginia was half Edgar's age and represented the only
sense of family Poe had ever known. When she became ill with tuberculosis in
1843, Poe fell into severe depression marked by bouts of drinking and gambling.
His publication of The Raven in 1845 illustrated this unstable mind frame and
foreshadowed Virginia's death in 1847. (Compton's, pp. 401-02) It shall clasp a
sainted maiden whom the angels name Lenore- Clasp a rare and radiant maiden whom
the angels name Lenore. Quoth the Raven, Nevermore.' (Frazah, Homepage)
Likewise, many of his works during this period reflect similarly disturbing
emotions brought on by a need to express the rage of past events in his life
through his short stories and poems.
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