Hello again, readers. If you’ve been following, you know that for the past few days, we’ve engaged in a series on the tragic lives of tormented artists, featuring such greats as Van Gogh, Hemingway and Kurt Cobain (among others). And to be honest, I was pretty sure this series would end with the third installment, which focused on musical genius.
But then, scrolling through the comments we received on one of the previous posts, I noticed someone suggested we also have an installment on Edgar Allan Poe and Frida Kahlo and I thought that was a really interesting idea, so I figured I’d write more in this series (thank you for the awesome suggestion!).
6. Edgar Allan Poe
Revered today by many as a true master of the horror genre (as well as one of the founding fathers of science fiction and the detective genre), Edgar Allan Poe’s like often made his work sound like small potatoes, in comparison.
It seems predictable, somehow, that the man who wrote such classics as the obsessive The Raven or the stomach-churning The Pit and the Pendulum, would have lived equally grim (well, maybe not equally…) moments in his own life, to be inspired to write such horrors.
Poe was born on the 19th of January 1809, the middle child of a couple of actors (so, not a family of great means). Interestingly, it’s believed by some that Edgar Allan Poe was named after the eponymous character in King Lear, which the couple were supposedly playing at the time of his birth.
Poe had a tumultuous childhood. His father left the family the year after his birth and his mother died of consumption in 1811, leaving Poe and his siblings orphans.
Edgar was unofficially adopted by a well-to-do merchant, John Allan, whom he remained with until early adulthood.
Poe’s relationship with his adoptive family became strained after Poe came into serious debt, as a young student, due to a passion for gambling, which his father didn’t approve of. It was around this time that his writing career started (mainly in an attempt to support himself), when he worked as a newspaper writer.
After this, Poe enrolled in the military at the age of 18, where he served for about two years, while also writing some short stories and poems (as well as some satirical verses about his commanding officers), but he eventually received an early discharge. He briefly reconciled with his adoptive father, but their relationship was still rocky.
One of the personal details about Poe that always draws attention is his marriage to his first cousin, Virginia Clemm, when he was 26 and she was only 13 years old, a rather unusual marrying age, even back then. It’s very probable that their marriage inspired a lot of his writing. And they were together for eleven years, until her death (also of consumption). The death of a beautiful, much beloved woman was a common theme in Poe’s writings (see Annabel Lee, for example) and it’s interesting to note that it was also a common theme in his short life. His mother’s death when he was two, then his step-mother’s death, when he was 20 and then, his wife’s death when he was in his early thirties, all of which had a profound impact on Poe’s mind and well-being.
Poe grew deeply unstable after his wife’s death. He had always had an alcohol problem, ever since his youth, which was only made worse by his wife’s illness (she first fell ill in 1842, five years before her death, and never completely recovered) and then, by her death. During her illness, he released perhaps his most haunting (and most famous) poem, The Raven, which appropriately mourns the loss of a beautiful, beloved woman. The poem enjoyed instant success.
Honestly, I think the most interesting aspect of Poe’s life was his death, ironically. Poe was found wandering the streets of Baltimore one early morning, utterly delirious at the relatively young age of forty. He was "in great distress, and… in need of immediate assistance", according to the man who found him.
He was taken to hospital, but never became conscious for long enough to explain what had happened to him and died some four days later. The whole incident was very strange, given that Poe was not wearing his own clothes when he was found and it’s said he kept repeating the name “Reynolds” (no one knew whom he might be referring).
Sadly, all records of his death were lost, so we don’t actually know why he died. It was believed to be from alcoholism (which wouldn’t really be a surprise), but popular theories have also claimed it was cholera, syphilis, delirium, heart disease as well as many other possibilities.
He lead a strange life, that much was certain, followed by tragedy from a very early age, which I suppose might explain his dark writings, at least to some extent.
It’s rather unfair that the image we now have of Edgar Allan Poe was greatly influenced by an article known as Griswold’s Memoir, written by Rufus Griswold, who had been a sworn enemy of Poe’s for many years. In his writings, he accused the writer of being a drunk madman, as well as a drug addict (there is no evidence to support that). And even though most of Griswold’s evidence turned out to be forged, it’s greatly influenced our view of the popular writer.
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References: Wikipedia
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