Back in May of 2021, Philadelphia Weekly published my Crime Beat column on Edgar Allan Poe's time in Philadelphia.
I interviewed Scott Peeples (seen in the below photo), author of Man in the Crowd: Edgar Allan Poe and the City.
You can read the column via the pages below (click on them to enlarge), the below link, or the below text:
How Philly shaped Edgar Allan Poe's pessimistic poetry - Philadelphia Weekly
Poe in Philadelphia:
Edgar Allan Poe Had Creative Peak While Living in Philly
By Paul Davis
I visited Edgar
Allan Poe’s house in Philadelphia on a school trip many years ago. I revisited
the historical house in my twenties when I was rereading and enjoying Poe,
especially “The Murders on the Rue Morgue,” which is credited as the very first
detective crime story.
I recently read
Scott Peeples’ “The Man of the Crowd: Edgar Allan Poe and the City,” which
covers Poe’s time in Richmond, Baltimore, New York, and of course Philadelphia.
Scott Peeples, a professor of English at the College of Charleston, also
co-edited, with J. Gerald Kennedy, “The Oxford Handbook of Edgar Allan
Poe,” and he wrote two other books on Poe as well.
I reached out to
Peeples and asked him about Poe’s time in Philadelphia, which was from 1838 to
1844.
“In some ways, it
was the most stable period of his adult life,” Peeples replied.” That’s not
saying much, but still, Poe lived in the same house for about four of the six
years in Philadelphia, which was very unusual for him. And he had steady
employment for a few years, as editor of Burton’s Gentleman’s
Magazine and then Graham’s Magazine. He got to know a lot of other
writers and editors; he met Charles Dickens when Dickens toured the city.
“Poe even came
close to launching his own magazine, something that he greatly desired. But he
never made a lot of money, and then in 1842 his wife Virginia began showing
symptoms of tuberculosis. Poe’s mother-in-law, who was also his aunt, lived
with Edgar and Virginia, and the three of them moved a couple of times between
1842 and ’44, before finally leaving for New York. During that last year or so
Poe began drinking more, and his wife’s illness weighed heavily on him. So
things were pretty shaky by the time he left Philadelphia.”
I asked what
significant work Poe produced while living in Philadelphia.
“It was his
creative peak --- I think that would be hard to argue with. He wrote and
published most of the stories he’s best known for today: “Ligeia,” “The Fall of
the House of Usher,” “The Tell-Tale Heart,” “The Black Cat,” “The Pit and the
Pendulum,” “The Masque of the Red Death,” “The Murders in the Rue Morgue,” “The
Gold-Bug,” “The Man of the Crowd,” and more,” Peeples said. “He wrote a lot of
satirical fiction as well, and a steady stream of book reviews.”
Peeples described
Poe’s house, which is now the National Historic Site on Spring Garden Street,
as relatively spacious considering how little money the family had.
“It was attached
to a much larger house owned by his landlord, but Poe’s place was a pretty nice
little home on the outskirts. Apparently, the landlord admired Poe as a writer
and didn’t really worry too much about the rent.”
Peeples said Poe
moved to Philadelphia in the wake of the Panic of 1837, as the city was trying
to bounce back from a recession.
“Even so, it was
growing pretty quickly --- not at the speed of New York, but definitely
expanding,” Peeples said. “Some impressive new public buildings were going up
--- Eastern State Penitentiary, the Second Bank of the US, the US Mint, the
Philadelphia Arcade --- but at the same time back lots were getting filled in
with smaller, shoddier houses. It probably felt kind of chaotic, despite the
city’s image as the Quaker City with the orderly grid of streets. There
were labor disputes and riots, including the burning of Pennsylvania Hall in
1838 by a racist mob, because they had hosted an abolitionist lecture. And the
city published a lot of newspapers and magazines, and that was probably the
main thing that drew Poe to Philadelphia in the first place.”
Peeples said he
wrote “Man of the Crowd” to show how much Poe engaged with the places he lived.
“Poe lived an
itinerant life --- he moved from city to city and within cities very
frequently, largely because he was never financially secure. Cities shaped Poe’s
life and career, and that was something I wanted to explore.”
Peeples said Poe’s
work has endured for many reasons.
“Poe’s stories are
more than creepy --- they confront some basic human questions in unsettling
ways: what’s it like to be dead? why am I my own worst enemy? Poe’s posthumous
image --- to some extent the one I’m implicitly challenging with this book ---
took on a life of its own, as he sort of became the face of gothic horror in
the twentieth century, thanks to comic books, movies, and a lot of other
adaptations.”
Paul Davis’ Crime Beat column appears here each week. You can contact him via pauldavisoncrime.com.
No comments:
Post a Comment