Edgar Allan Poe Poems by Edgar Allan Poe

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Best known for his scary tales, mystery and detective stories and imaginative fantasy stories, Edgar Allan Poe was also a gifted poet. He wrote more than 70 poems and almost all of them have been widely appreciated by readers and critics alike.This collection contains some of his most famous ones, including the immortal Raven, which combines a sense of doom and nameless despair. With its ringing, alliterative and repetitive lines and strange, supernatural atmosphere, it remains one of Poe's best known and most quoted poems.Other poems in the anthology include The Bells, which was published after Poe's death. This poem is one of his most “acoustic” poems. It is divided into four parts and with each succeeding part, the sound of the bells becomes more and more sinister and gloomy. It was rejected several times by different publishers who felt that it skirted the thin line between verse and nonsense. However, in later years, composers like Rachmaninoff composed a sonata based on the poem and created a choral symphony for the bell sounds. Contemporary bands like Pink Floyd have also referenced it in their song “Time.”Ulalume is another well known Poe poem. This one again focuses on sound and was originally written as an elocution piece. Scholars have speculated that the poem's dark and dismal theme is similar to The Raven's and could be rooted in the grief that Poe felt after recently losing his beloved wife, Virginia. Ulalume is also full of classical allusions to different myths and legends. The original text of the poem contains a brilliant illustration by Dante Gabriel Rossetti.Annabel Lee is the last complete poem written by Poe. This one also speaks of loss, love and despair. To My Mother is actually written to his mother-in-law and aunt, Maria Clemm. It is sometimes entitled Sonnet to My Mother and was published as a tribute to the mother of the woman he deeply loved, his wife Virginia.Lesser known poems like The Coliseum, The Conqueror Worm, To One in Paradise, To Francis S Osgood and others form the rest of the collection along with many others.In his short but memorable life, Poe created a whole new genre of writing. He is generally acknowledged as the father of detective fiction and also of the emerging genre of sci-fi. His works have influenced studies in fields as diverse as cosmology and cryptography. His deeply unhappy childhood and subsequent violent disagreements with his adoptive parents created much sadness in his young life, but he overcame his difficulties and found himself in writing.Poe's poems must be read aloud to be completely savored and this volume would certainly provide hours of enjoyable family reading or listening!

Recent Episodes
  • 01 – The Raven
    Jan 2, 2025 – 07:46
  • 02 – The Bells
    Jan 1, 2025 – 04:09
  • 03 – Ulalume
    Dec 31, 2024 – 04:45
  • 04 – To Helen
    Dec 30, 2024 – 03:36
  • 05 – Annabel Lee
    Dec 29, 2024 – 01:46
  • 06 – A Valentine
    Dec 28, 2024 – 01:11
  • 07 – An Enigma
    Dec 27, 2024 – 00:56
  • 08 – To My Mother
    Dec 26, 2024 – 00:48
  • 09 – For Annie
    Dec 25, 2024 – 02:35
  • 10 – To F—–
    Dec 24, 2024 – 00:51
  • 11 – To Francis S. Osgood
    Dec 23, 2024 – 00:36
  • 12 – Eldorado
    Dec 22, 2024 – 00:54
  • 13 – Eulalie
    Dec 21, 2024 – 01:04
  • 14 – To Marie Louise (Shew)
    Dec 20, 2024 – 01:04
  • 15 – The City in the Sea
    Dec 19, 2024 – 02:23
  • 16 – The Sleeper
    Dec 18, 2024 – 03:01
  • 17 – Bridal Ballad
    Dec 17, 2024 – 01:08
  • 18 – Lenore
    Dec 16, 2024 – 02:13
  • 19 – To One In Paradise
    Dec 15, 2024 – 01:10
  • 20 – The Coliseum
    Dec 14, 2024 – 02:44
  • 21 – The Haunted Palace
    Dec 13, 2024 – 02:05
  • 22 – The Conqueror Worm
    Dec 12, 2024 – 01:36
  • 23 – Silence
    Dec 11, 2024 – 00:58
  • 24 – Dream Land
    Dec 10, 2024 – 02:13
  • 25 – Hymn
    Dec 9, 2024 – 00:40
  • 26 – To Zante
    Dec 8, 2024 – 00:59
  • 27 – Sonnet to Science
    Dec 7, 2024 – 00:52
  • 28 – Forest Reverie
    Dec 6, 2024 – 01:21
  • 29 – The Valley of Unrest
    Dec 5, 2024 – 01:21
  • 30 – Israfel
    Dec 4, 2024 – 01:43
  • 31 – To –
    Dec 3, 2024 – 00:41
  • 32 – To —
    Dec 2, 2024 – 00:26
  • 33 – To the River
    Dec 1, 2024 – 00:44
  • 34 – Song
    Nov 30, 2024 – 00:50
  • 35 – Spirits of the Dead
    Nov 29, 2024 – 01:33
  • 36 – A Dream
    Nov 28, 2024 – 00:50
  • 37 – Romance
    Nov 27, 2024 – 01:03
  • 38 – Fairy-Land
    Nov 26, 2024 – 01:37
  • 39 – The Lake – To —–
    Nov 25, 2024 – 01:02
  • 40 – Evening Star
    Nov 24, 2024 – 00:55
  • 41 – The Happiest Day
    Nov 23, 2024 – 01:09
  • 42 – Imitation
    Nov 22, 2024 – 00:53
  • 43 – Hymn to Aristogenton and Harmodius
    Nov 21, 2024 – 00:56
  • 44 – Dreams
    Nov 20, 2024 – 01:59
  • 45 – In Youth I Have Known One
    Nov 19, 2024 – 02:00
  • 46 – A Paean
    Nov 18, 2024 – 01:52
  • 47 – Alone
    Nov 17, 2024 – 01:11
  • 48 – The Village Street
    Nov 16, 2024 – 03:09
Recent Reviews
  • el.has.issues
    Great!
    Just what I needed
  • Poor Richard Pt2
    Great Experience
    I very much enjoy the way he read. Not too fast, not too slow, enough to keep you on the edge, an excitement given pledge. The only thing that I dislike is the lack of poems. Great job though!
  • Didn’t enjoy
    Weird voice
    Didn’t like the sound of his voice. He hurried through the lines, his intonation was all weird and hard to understand. It just seemed like he was hurrying through them rather than actually trying to read them. Did not enjoy
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