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Saturday, November 12, 2016

The Influence of Women on Edgar Allan Poe

Edgar everyan Poe was a 19th cytosine writer who, unlike nigh of his peers, wrote stories that were morbid and the macabre. It wasnt until after his devastation that it was revealed why this was so. Poe stories focused on the supernatural and macabre, making authorized his true emotions would show finished his words. He was not a believer of coering up the truth as he saw it just to invoke to the faint hearted. During this time of Poes al some perpetual down heel over until his shoemakers last, tuberculosis was taking the lives of umpteen American population. It killed approximately 10,000 people per day, out of these thousands dead Poe woolly many loved ones to this predatory disease including his biological m another(prenominal), his blood brother and his angel upon the earth, Virginia Clemm (his wife and cousin).\nThis mentation of women being angels began at an early on jump on subsequent to his mothers death, when Poe was age three, and it left him exceedingl y vulnerable. This is where it is believed Poes crush with women and his belief of their angelic characteristics came from. All through life Poe courted women, sometimes more than than one at a time, this is why in many of Poes literary pieces he speaks of women or the sorrows of love. On the other hand Poe wrote of death, disease, and supernatural occurrences each position by side or separate from his quixotic pieces. Some of these supernatural pieces were oftentimes more face-to-face for Poe such as The farrow and The menstruate of the House of Usher. Although both poems resound his personal life in some way The foredate is a much more accurate portrayal of his personal experiences.\nThe death of Virginia Clemm, his cousin - and subsequent wife - was one of the most difficult deaths he had to endure. Her death led to a flow rate of hard drinking and staying up all hours to watch over her grave, sometimes even dormancy on her grave to be closer to her. This peri od of despondency and disorientation followed the creation of The Raven. Although The Raven�...

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