Text: Sidney P. Moss, “Chapter 04,” Poe's Literary Battles, 1963, pp. 85-131 (This material is protected by copyright)


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[page 85:]

4

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THE ANATOMY OF A CAMPAIGN

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Poe and Lewis Gaylord Clark

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One or two years, since elapsed, may have mellowed down the petulance, without interfering with the rigor of the critic. Most surely they have not yet taught him to read through the medium of a publisher's interest, nor convinced him of the impolicy of speaking the truth. — Edgar A. Poe

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The battle between Poe and Lewis Gaylord Clark constitutes a campaign that can be isolated from the melee and studied almost clinically. Poe and Clark crossed swords time and time again in journals, in the form of defamatory and derisive articles. These articles, culled from those periodicals and arranged chronologically, serve to document the shifting fortunes of their quarrel. More important, they reveal for what reasons and under what circumstances Poe became one of the most maligned persons in literary history.

Not that some of the charges leveled against Poe were baseless. Poe in his letters, both private and public, stands self-confessed as an unstable person and an occasional drunkard. But Clark and his friends did not proclaim Poe's faults, nor exaggerate them, nor ascribe to him vices of which he was guiltless, nor hint at unmentionable acts of wickedness, until Poe singled them out for attack. [page 86:] Clark, as will be seen, enjoyed a singular advantage over Poe: he had his own magazine, the Knickerbocker, which was widely circulated, whereas Poe had to take his stand wherever opportunity afforded. And if Clark was not altogether a combatant worthy of Poe's mettle, he had more than enough allies to make up the difference.

Even as Rufus Wilmot Griswold was Poe's posthumous nemesis,(1) Clark was Poe's contemporary one. The reasons for Clark's consistent baiting of and hostility toward Poe are not obscure, as some writers believe; they are simply numerous.

First, as we have said, Clark was the self-appointed protector of New York reputations, and Poe's assaults upon the works of members of his clique were enough to antagonize him. Second, being the pivot of the New York group, Clark tended to be a sectionalist and to favor only New York writers, although he did not discriminate against such New Englanders as Longfellow when they proved serviceable to him. Clark's hostile treatment of one Southerner, William Gilmore Simms, to cite only one instance, became so notorious that one writer, signing himself “S. T.,” blasted the Knickerbocker on this score from three separate journals.(2) And Simms's own letters are full of such statements as: “Clarke [sic] is a creature to be kicked or spit upon not argued with or spoken to,” and, “Had I been living in N. Y. I could not have refrained, long ago, to have scourged him hip & thigh for the scoundrel & puppy that he is.”(3) On the grounds of such sectionalism, perhaps aggravated by the fear of rivalry, can Poe's remark be explained, that the Knickerbocker “refused to exchange with us [the Southern Literary Messenger] from the first.”(4) [page 87:]

Third, Clark's twin brother Willis, co-editor of the Knickerbocker, had attacked Poe on more than one occasion, as we have seen, and it was only natural, perhaps, that Lewis Clark should bombard the same target.

A fourth, if less likely, reason for the mutual antagonism between Poe and Lewis Clark “may have been partly due to the latter's role in the ‘Moon Hoax.’”(5) Poe had hoaxed the country with his “Hans Phaall — a Tale,” which was published in the June, 1835, number of the Southern Literary Messenger. A similar hoax was perpetrated only a few weeks later in New York. As a contemporary reported the incident:

The chief perpetrator was a ... young Englishman named Richard Adams Locke who ... was then editor of the Sun newspaper, in the columns of which it appeared, credited to a supplement of the Edinburgh Philosophical Journal. ...

It was a pretended account of wonderful discoveries on the surface of the earth's satellite made by Sir John F. W. Herschel at the Cape of Good Hope, by means of a newly-constructed telescope. ...

The newspapers throughout the country copied the article and commented on it. Some dishonestly withheld credit to the Sun, leaving the inference that they had taken it from the famous “supplement.” The more stately newspapers — the “respectable weeklies” — were thoroughly hoaxed. The New York Daily Advertiser ... said that “Sir John had added a stock of knowledge to the present age that will immortalize his name and place it high on the page of science.” The Albany Daily Advertiser read “with unspeakable emotions of pleasure and astonishment an article from the last Edinburgh Philosophical Journal. ... ” Some of the grave religious journals made the great discovery a subject for pointed homilies. ...

Scientific men were equally deceived at first. ...

In a few days the story was discovered to be a pure fiction. Locke had ... engaged in preparing the “Moon Hoax” ... for the purpose of testing the extent of public credulity. It was a successful experiment. ...

What our contemporary narrator calls “the secret history” of the “Moon Hoax” has possible bearing on the antagonism between Poe and Lewis Clark:

Mr. Moses Y. Beach had recently become sole proprietor of the Sun, and Richard Adams Locke was the editor. It was desirable to have some new and startling features to increase its popularity, and Locke for a consideration proposed to prepare for it a work of fiction. To [page 88:] this proposal Mr. Beach agreed. Locke consulted Lewis Gaylord Clark, the editor of the Knickerbocker Magazine, as to the subject. The Edinburgh Scientific Journal was then busied with Herschel's astronomical explorations at the Cape of Good Hope, and Clark proposed to make these the basis of the story. It was done. Clark was the real inventor of the incidents, the imaginative part, while to Locke was intrusted the ingenious task of unfolding the discoveries.(6)

In regard to this hoax, Poe wrote his friend, John P. Kennedy, on September 11, 1835:

Have you seen the “Discoveries in the Moon”? Do you not think it altogether suggested by Hans Phaal? It is very singular, — but when I first purposed writing a Tale concerning the Moon, the idea of Telescopic discoveries suggested itself to me — but I afterwards abandoned it. I had however spoken of it freely, & from many little incidents & apparently trivial remarks in those Discoveries I am convinced that the idea was stolen from myself.(7)

As late as 1846 Poe publicly repeated these charges and amplified them:

It was three weeks after the issue of “The Messenger” containing “Hans Phaall” that the first of the “Moon-Hoax” editorials made its appearance in “The Sun,” and no sooner had I seen the paper than I understood the jest, which not for a moment could I doubt had been suggested by my own jeu d’esprit. Some of the New York journals ... saw the matter in the same light, and published the “Moon Story” side by side with “Hans Phaall,” thinking that the author of the one had been detected in the author of the other.

Poe then stated that he was “bound to do Mr. Locke the justice to say that he denies having seen my article prior to the publication of his own; and I am bound to add, also, that I believe him.” Unfortunately, however, “Having read the Moon story to an end and found it anticipative of all the main points of my ‘Hans Phaall,’ I suffered the latter to remain unfinished.”(8) Clark and Poe may have become antagonistic on this account, the former because Poe suggested plagiarism in the “Moon Hoax,” which Clark had had a hand in perpetrating; the latter because he had been despoiled of his idea.

Whatever the background of the animosity between Poe and Clark, it was Poe's repeated bombardment of the New [page 89:] York coterie that finally caused Clark to cease his sniping at Poe and to open fire at him with everything in his arsenal. Poe seemed to consider Clark and his antics contemptible and noticed him only occasionally. Nevertheless, Clark grew more and more vituperative, and it is not too much to say that the reverberations of his charges are still echoing.

Sniping began on August, 1838. The May, 1837, issue of the Knickerbocker had carried Harpers’ announcement of the publication of Poe's Narrative of Arthur Gordon Pym,(9) and Lewis Clark's review of the novel duly appeared fifteen months later. Clark began by reprinting the long title, making certain to italicize the word incredible in the phrase, “together with the incredible adventures and discoveries ... to which that distressing calamity gave rise,” then remarked:

There are a great many tough stories in this book, told in a loose and slip-shod style, seldom chequered by any of the more common graces of composition, beyond a Robinson Crusoe-ish sort of simplicity of narration. This work is one of much interest, with all its defects, not the least of which is, that it is too liberally stuffed with ‘horrid circumstances of blood and battle.’ We would not be so uncourteous as to insinuate a doubt of Mr. Pym's veracity, now that he lies ‘under the sod;’ but we should very much question that gentleman's word, who should affirm, after having thoroughly perused the volume before us, that he believed the various adventures and hairbreadth ‘scapes therein recorded.(10)

That Clark, in dealing with an imaginative story, should dwell upon “Mr. Pym's veracity” is ironic. The same irony was involved in Clark's questioning the veracity of Herman Melville's Typee (1846), a novel that by and large was founded on fact.(11)

Despite Lewis Clark's boast to Longfellow at the time that Outre-Mer was in production, that Harpers “tell me, that they can lose on no book, now — even the worst,(12) such reviews(13) [page 90:] made this Harpers’ book sell “less than a thousand copies.”(14) In England, however, where no clique militated against the book, the “authorized” edition of Pym appears to have been successful, if the fact that the work was pirated is indicative of success.(15)

In December, 1839, the Knickerbocker carried this announcement: “Notices of the following works, although in type, are unavoidably postponed till our next number: ... Tales [of the Grotesque and Arabesque] by E. A. Poe. ...(16) But the promised notice, “although in type,” never appeared. Instead, Clark, in reviewing a number of Burton's Gentleman's Magazine, made it a point to indicate that the “Journal of Julius Rodman,” which had been appearing serially in that magazine since January, 1840, was another fabrication like Pym.(17)

In June, 1840, Poe began circulating his “Prospectus of the Penn Magazine, a Monthly Literary Journal, To Be Edited and Published in the City of Philadelphia, by Edgar A. Poe.” In this prospectus he stated the critical principles he intended to observe in the projected magazine, a statement that reveals mature self-examination:

To those who remember the early years of The Messenger, it will be scarcely necessary to say that its main feature was a somewhat overdone causticity in the department of Critical Notices. The Penn Magazine will retain this trait of severity in so much only as the calmest and sternest sense of literary justice will permit. One or two years, since elapsed, may have mellowed down the petulance, without interfering with the rigor of the critic. Most surely they have not [page 91:] yet taught him to read through the medium of a publisher's interest, nor convinced him of the impolicy of speaking the truth. It shall be the first and chief purpose of the Magazine now proposed, to become known as one where may be found, at all times, and upon all subjects, an honest and fearless opinion. This is a purpose of which no man need be ashamed. It is one, moreover, whose novelty at least will give it interest.(18)

Turning to another matter, Poe wrote: “To the mechanical execution of the work the greatest attention will be given. ... In this respect, it is proposed to surpass, by very much, the ordinary Magazine style. The form will nearly resemble that of The Knickerbocker. The paper will be equal to that of The North American Review.” Clearly, Poe intended to compete with the two magazines he contemned, magazines that represented the two most powerful literary cliques then operating in America and in whose pages he refused to compromise himself by appearing.(19) Another reason Poe had for singling out the Knickerbocker and the North American Review may be explained by his remarks in a subsequent prospectus issued August, 1840, in which, reiterating what he had said earlier, he added:

It shall be a leading object to assert precept, and to maintain in practice the rights, while in effect it demonstrates the advantages, of an absolutely independent criticism — a criticism self-sustained; guiding itself only by the purest rules of Art; analyzing and urging these rules as it applies them; holding itself aloof from all personal bias; acknowledging no fear save that of outraging the right; yielding no point either to the vanity of the author, or to the assumptions of antique prejudice, or of the involute and anonymous cant of the Quarterlies, or to the arrogance of those organized cliques which, hanging like nightmares upon American literature, manufacture at the nod of our principal booksellers, a pseudo-public opinion by wholesale.(20)

Clark, when news reached him that William E. Burton had put up his Gentleman's Magazine for sale, used his chance to [page 92:] gloat at what he considered the failure of a rival enterprise, as well as to make a rather garbled gibe at Poe's prospectus:

The ‘Gentleman's Magazine,’ issued monthly at Philadelphia.. is offered for sale; ‘the proprietor being about to engage in a more profitable business.’ Mr. E. A. Poe, a spirited writer, and hitherto the principal editor of the miscellany in question, announces his retirement from its supervision. He has issued proposals for a new monthly magazine, ‘to be executed in the neatest style, after the manner of the Knickerbocker,’ to which he promises to bring great additions to the literary aid he has hitherto diverted into a different channe1.(21)

The distortions in this brief paragraph are many. First, the initial quotation marks are sneers of disbelief, something that “S. T.” called attention to when he wrote of Clark's inveterate use of inverted commas as “one of those small typographical tricks in which the Magazine delights.” Second, the assertion that Poe was the principal editor, when actually he was only Burton's assistant, implies that Poe was responsible for the “downfall” of the “miscellany in question.” And third, the misquotation of Poe's prospectus statement makes it appear that Poe intended to imitate, not rival, the Knickerbocker.

Despite all this sniping, Poe refrained from noticing Lewis Clark. Only in a private letter to a fellow editor, Joseph Evans Snodgrass, did he fleetingly express his contempt for Clark when he wrote that the Knickerbocker was “still edited by Clark the brother of W. Gaylord,”(22) an expression almost identical to the one he used five years later in his Literati paper on Clark: “Mr. Clark is known principally as the twin brother of the late Willis Gaylord Clark.”(23)

The hostility that Clark felt toward Poe was not eased by the fact that Poe, who had become editor of Graham's Magazine, was proceeding to make that periodical the chief competitor of the Knickerbocker.(24) Nor was Clark pacified when Poe went on the literary warpath, hacking at the scalps of such men as [page 93:] Thomas Ward, popularly known as Flaccus, who was a permanent contributor to the Knickerbocker.(25) The article called “Our Amateur Poets, No. I — Flaccus”(26) was Poe's typical attack on the New York coterie. To this article he signed his name, an unusual procedure in a period of anonymous reviewing:

The poet now comprehended in the cognomen Flaccus, is ... merely a Mr. ——— Ward, of Gotham, once a contributor to the New York “American,” and to the New York “Knickerbocker” Magazine.

... The sum of his deserts has been footed up by a clique who are in the habit of reckoning units as tens ... but with deference to the more matured opinions of the “Knickerbocker,” we may be permitted to entertain a doubt whether he is either Jupiter Tonans, or Phoebus Apollo. ...

Poe then “used him up” according to the familiar pattern:

But we are fairly wearied with this absurd theme. Who calls Mr. Ward a poet? He is a second-rate, or a third-rate, or perhaps a ninety-ninth-rate poetaster. ... But neither Mr. Ward nor “The Knickerbocker” would be convinced.

Poe ended the review by announcing that he was throwing Flaccus's book to the pigs.(27)

About the same time that this tomahawking took place, Poe reached for Lewis Clark's head, among others. The article, entitled “Our Magazine Literature,” appeared with only an “L” as signature on March 11, 1843, in the New World and, despite the mixed views that Poe scholars have regarding its authorship,(28) the fact that Clark attributed it to Poe is sufficient to make it figure as a shot in the continuing war between them: [page 94:]

The glory of the Knickerbocker is for ever departed. Once, it was a thrice welcome messenger of intellectual entertainment to everybody, ladies, gentlemen and all. Nearly all our distinguished literary men have at times, made it the medium of their communication to the public. But, alas! the good names now connected with it are few and far between, and its subscription list is rapidly dwindling away. A secondary reason for this, we imagine, is in the bad management of its pecuniary affairs; it has been sold to a Boston publisher, and, being printed there, is a Boston magazine, and no more the Knickerbocker. But the principal cause of its melancholy decline, may be traced to the peculiar and unappreciated talent of its editor, Lewis G. Clark. The only redeeming quality which we (mind, we don’t say the public) can find in this gentleman, is in the fact that he is the brother of the late Willis G. Clark, who was one of the most gifted of our poets, and an exceedingly pleasant prose-writer. Mr. Lewis Clark has made a considerable noise in the literary world, but how he has made it, would be difficult for his best friends to explain. ... The present condition of this periodical is that of a poorly-cooked-up concern, a huge handsome-looking body, but without a soul. The sooner it dies, the better will it be for the proprietors; but if they will secure an able and efficient editor, we doubt not but that it might be placed in the noble station which it once occupied.

Then praising Graham, whose magazine Poe had edited, for his liberal payment for articles and for “patronizing a large[r] number of eminent writers in prose and verse, than any other publisher in the country,” the writer turned to Griswold, who had replaced Poe as editor of Graham's. “Neither do we like the nominal editor of Graham's Magazine. And why? Because ... he possesses too many of the peculiar characteristics of Lewis G. Clark. Mr. Rufus W. Griswold is wholly unfit, either by intellect or character, to occupy the editorial chair of Graham's Magazine.”(29)

More than three years after this article appeared, Lewis Clark suggested that Poe had first submitted it to the Knickerbocker.(30) It is impossible to credit this suggestion, considering what their relations were at this time. What makes the suggestion [page 95:] equally incredible is that Clark did not mention the rejection at once when he could have capitalized on it, but waited for more than three years to publish the assertion — and then only when he was openly assailed by Poe in the Literati papers. Neither, as Clark suggested in his initial statement below, was the article submitted to Epes Sargent of Sargent's New Monthly Magazine before Park Benjamin, editor of the New World, accepted it.

Clark, more concerned for himself than for his friend and contributor, Thomas “Flaccus” Ward, responded to the New World article in the next issue of the Knickerbocker:

Our friend and old correspondent, Sargent ... has thought it advisable to notice an attack in the ‘New World,’ by some ‘rejected contributor,’ upon his publication.(31) This was unwise. Even the editor [Park Benjamin] was ashamed of his importunate correspondent, and disclaimed him. All that such a small-beer ‘complainant’ desires, is the notoriety of any notice whatsoever. If left to his native insignificance, he mourns with Meddle in the play, that he can ‘get nobody to kick him.’ Now to our mind, one of the most amusing spectacles in life, is a mortified but impotent littérateur of this sort; an ambitious ‘authorling’ perhaps of a small volume of effete and lamentable trash, full of little, ragged ideas, stolen and disguised among original inanities, which has fallen dead-born from the press, before the first fifty copies printed are exhausted in a ‘third edition!’(32) Disturb not, friend Sargent, the leaden repose of a ‘critic’ which is even more harmless than it is malignant. Something was said, we believe, in it's [sic] communication about the ‘Old Knick's dwindling away,’ and ‘all that sort of thing and so forth; ‘ but having received on that day an accession of thirty-eight new names to our list of subscribers, with what complacency did we consign the paragraph to the ‘receptacle of things lost upon earth!’(33)

Clark's statement that Park Benjamin disclaimed the writer of “Our Magazine Literature” was a falsehood. Typical of Benjamin's caustic irony — a technique that Clark himself [page 96:] might have admired in other contexts — was the comment he subjoined to the article, a comment that, far from disclaiming, reinforced the remarks of his anonymous contributor:

Comments by the Editor. — We have consented to publish the foregoing, not because we agree with it, but because we do not. ... Now the writer of the above is, of course, altogether in the wrong; the magazines of our country are the most admirable affairs imaginable — polished corners of the temple — carved cariatides [sic] on the portico of literature. The generous commendations in the newspapers which always herald their monthly appearance are perfectly disinterested and just, and if we are to believe them, nor heaven nor earth nor the waters under the earth ever contained anything so beautiful, so exquisite, so superb, so splendid, so entrancing and soul-subduing. What makes it very wonderful is, that though every number never can be surpassed, the next is better still, and thus “the agony of praise is piled up. ...(34)

It was not until July that Clark took Poe to task for his review of Flaccus, and then indirectly, through an unnamed correspondent:

Seeing the other day a number of ‘Graham's Magazine,’ I read in it an article by E. A. Poe, who comes down on your old correspondent ‘Flaccus’ like a mountain of lead! It is clear that ‘Flaccus’ has in many places exposed himself to the charge of unmelodious rhymes, incongruous figures, and occasionally faulty taste. But there is a difference between a Pope that sometimes nods, and a Cibber that never wakes! I am not easily moved, in the matter of poetry; I think, at least, that it must have merit to please me; and I well remember that Flaccus's metrical love-tale in your pages seemed to me very sweet and original, and strongly redolent of the early English odor. His ‘Epistle from my Arm-chair’ was in good hexameters, and his ‘Address to the President of the New-England Temperance Society’ had a Tom Moore-ish spice of elegant wit about it, and might have been written by Mr. Poe in about a century of leap-years.(35)

Clark, contrary to his own advice to Epes Sargent, did not leave the “critic” to his “native insignificance.” Instead, he began gunning for Poe with a vengeance. Poe in August, 1843, had published another in his series “Our Amateur Poets” in Graham's,(36) this time dealing with William Ellery Channing, a nephew of the brilliant Unitarian minister. A rationalist in his criticism and one who liked to imagine himself rigorously so in [page 97:] the creation of his poems and stories (see “The Philosophy of Composition,” for instance), Poe was inveterately opposed to Transcendentalism, especially to what he considered its lack of clarity and intellectual rigor. While lambasting this Transcendental poet whose poems, he demonstrated, were “full of all kinds of mistakes, of which the most important is that of their having been printed at all,” Poe asserted that Channing had become infected with the Carlyle virus in that he seemed to have deduced from Carlyle “an opinion of the sublimity of everything odd, and of the profundity of everything meaningless. ...

Mr. Carlyle [Poe affirmed] ... is obscure only. ... Either a man intends to be understood, or he does not. If he write a book which he intends not to be understood, we shall be very happy indeed not to understand it; but if he write a book which he means to be understood, and, in this book, be at all possible pains to prevent us from understanding it, we can only say he is an ass — and this, to be brief, is our private opinion of Mr. Carlyle, which we now take the liberty of making public.

Using another person as a shield again, this time the editor of the Louisville Daily Journal, George Denison Prentice — a form of attack that was becoming characteristic of him — Clark wrote:

Mr. Prentice, the well-known Louisville Journalist, is ‘down upon’ a ‘gentleman of some smartness who rejoices in the euphonious name of Poe,’ (a correspondent of ours spells it Poh! ’) for terming Carlyle, in one of his thousand-and-one Mac-Grawler critiques, ‘an ass.’ The Kentucky poet and politician thus rejoins: ‘We have no more doubt that Mr. Edgar A. Poe is a very good judge of an ass, than we have that he is a very poor judge of such a man as Thomas Carlyle. He has no sympathies with the great and wonderful operations of Carlyle's mind, and is therefore unable to appreciate him. A blind man can describe a rainbow as accurately as Mr. Poe can Carlyle's mind. What Mr. Poe lacks in Carlyleism he makes up in jackassism. It is very likely that Mr. Carlyle's disciples are as poor judges of an ass as Mr. Poe is of Carlyle. Let them not abuse each other, or strive to overcome obstacles which are utterly irremovable. That Mr. Poe has all the native tendencies necessary to qualify him to be a judge of asses, he has given repeated evidences to the public.’(37)

Though Poe did not reply to this attack, he remembered both Prentice and Clark for their abuse. In revising his sketch [page 98:] “The Literary Life of Thingum Bob, Esq.” (which first appeared in the Southern Literary Messenger in December, 1844) for the Broadway Journal (July 26, 1845), Poe wrote:

“I bought auction copies (cheap) of. ‘Prentice's Billingsgate,’ (folio edition,) and ‘Lewis G. Clarke [sic] on Tongue.’”(38)

The quarrel lapsed for a while. In the meantime, Poe's criticism was of such a caliber that he was winning much prestige among some of the independent critics. James Russell Lowell, for example, observed in Graham's (at this time the most widely circulated magazine in the country) that Poe was

at once the most discriminating, philosophical, and fearless critic upon imaginative works who has written in America. It may be that we should qualify our remark a little, and say that he might be, rather than always is, for he seems sometimes to mistake his phial of prussic-acid for his inkstand. If we do not always agree with him in his premises, we are, at least, satisfied that his deductions are logical, and that we are reading the thoughts of a man who thinks for himself, and says what he thinks, and knows well what he is talking about. His analytic power would furnish forth bravely some score of ordinary critics. ... Had Mr. Poe had the control of a magazine of his own, in which to display his critical abilities, he would have been as autocratic, ere this, in America, as Professor Wilson has been in England; and his criticisms, we are sure, would have been far more profound and philosophical than those of the Scotsman. As it is, he has squared out blocks enough to build an enduring pyramid, but has left them lying carelessly and unclaimed in many quarries. ... (39)

In addition, Poe had sold “The Raven” to the American Review, where, appearing under the pseudonym of “Quarles” on February, 1845;(40) it proceeded to make an impression that in all likelihood has not been surpassed by any single piece of American poetry.

Apparently, and only apparently, veering with the critical wind, Clark published in the Knickerbocker a favorable report of Poe — a report conspicuous because unique:

The second number of ‘The American Review and Whig Journal,’ ... has made its appearance. The very best thing in its pages is an [page 99:] unique, singularly imaginative, and most musical effusion, entitled ‘The Raven.’ We have never before, to our knowledge, met the author, Mr. Edgar A. Poe, as a poet [!]; but if the poem to which we allude be a specimen of his powers in this kind, we shall always be glad to welcome him in his new department.(41)

But Clark, by the time the next number of the Knickerbocker appeared, had recovered from his ostensible surprise and revised his opinion of “The Raven”:

We have already encountered one or two parodies upon Mr. Poe's ‘Raven,’ but have seen nothing so faithful to the original, nor so well executed in all respects, as one which has been sent us, entitled, ‘The Black Cat.’ The lines purport to have ‘slipped from the hat of a wild-looking young man, as he rushed from the door of a respectable house in one of our inland towns. It only serves to show the effect upon country minds of so large an amount of ‘pokerishness’ as was contained in the poem alluded to.’(42)

Clark then quoted a few stanzas of the parody.

This solitary favorable report of Poe in the Knickerbocker may be explained most likely by the fact that George H. Colton, then editor of the American Review, was Clark's relative, and that Clark may only have been doing Colton a good turn by noting the appearance of “The Raven” in its pages with approbation.

In any event, the Broadway Journal, of which Poe officially became a co-editor on March 8, 1845, treated the Knickerbocker and its editor — at least at the outset — quite flatteringly, declaring in one instance that the Knickerbocker was one of the few magazines that exhibited a “higher reach in the department of magazine literature than the country has ever offered before,” and, in another instance, favorably noticing the Knickerbocker Sketch Book that had been edited by Lewis Clark.(43) Clark, however, still nursing his grudge against Poe for having written “Our Magazine Literature,” and looking for an opportunity to express his animosity, took issue with an unsigned article by Poe — ”Magazine-Writing — Peter Snook” — that appeared in the Broadway Journal on June 7, 1845:(44) [page 100:]

Some sage correspondent of the ‘Broadway Journal’ has temporarily resuscitated from oblivion an article from an Old England magazine, entitled ‘Mr. Peter Snook,’ which it lauds without stint, but the very ‘plums’ of which we defy any person of taste to swallow with pleasure.. ‘Chaçun [sic] à son goût,’ however; and had it not been for an indiscriminate fling at American periodicals, we should not have quarrelled with the commentaries of the nil-admirari critic in question: he is simply one of a numerous class, who are ‘nothing if not critical,’ and even less than nothing at that.

Clark then called the “sage correspondent” a “literary Aristarchus,” and contrasted his taste for literary works produced abroad with the bias of the Knickerbocker for those produced at home to imply that the “correspondent” was anti-American. Hardly by coincidence, Clark also contrasted Rufus Griswold's pro-American literary attitudes with those of the unnamed writer of the article, whom he alluded to as an “anonymous decrier of our own periodicals.”(45)

The statement regarding the “indiscriminate fling at American periodicals” may be an allusion to “Our Magazine Literature” or to the “Peter Snook” article, or both. In the latter article (a revision of the original that appeared in the Southern Literary Messenger in October, 1836), Poe had said that American critics were deficient: “The best American review ever penned is miserably ineffective when compared with the notice of [Macaulay's] ... Bacon — and yet this ... is, in general, a piece of tawdry sophistry. ... ” Moreover, he added, American tale-writers, who supplied the very staple of the magazines, showed the “most remarkable deficiency in skill. If we except first Mr. Hawthorne — secondly, Mr. Simms — thirdly Mr. Willis — and fourthly, one or two others, ... there is not even a respectably skilful tale-writer on this side the Atlantic.”

Clark must have suspected that Poe had written the “Peter Snook” article, for, beginning with the March 8 number of the Broadway Journal, Poe's name appeared on the masthead as one of its editors. Furthermore, in five weekly numbers of the Journal (from March 8 to April 5) Poe had replied to [page 101:] “Outis” in the so-called Longfellow war that had created an uproar among the Boston and New York cliques, the details of which are recounted in the next chapter.

Poe, in his ironic way, responded to the veiled attack. In the Broadway Journal of July 12, he called the forty-two-line attack a three-line compliment, which he “sincerely” hoped it was not. In the process of correcting Clark's error in French — an unnecessary cedilla — he omitted a circumflex and insisted rather perversely that the preposition was a verb:

The Knickerbocker for July has ... some meritorious contribu-tions — but neither man nor devil can dissuade its editor from a monthly farrago of type so small as to be nearly invisible, and so stupid as to make us wish it was quite so. In three lines devoted to the “Broadway Journal” intended to be complimentary, we believe, although we sincerely hope not, he makes use of what he supposes to be a French proverb, and writes it Chaçun à son gout [sic], taking great pains to place a grave accent on the verb, mistaking it for the preposition, and complimenting the hard c with a cedilla. Within the compass of the same three lines, he talks about a nil admirari critic; some person, we presume, having quizzed him with the information that the meaning of nil admirari is “to admire nothing.” We certainly do not admire Mr. Clarke [sic] — nor his wig — but the true English of the Latin phrase is “to wonder at nothing,” and we plead guilty to having wondered at nothing since we have found the Knickerbocker sinking day by day in the public opinion in despite of the brilliant abilities and thoroughly liberal education of Mr. Lewis Gaylord Clarke.(46)

These exchanges almost led to a street fight between Poe and Clark. Thomas Holly Chivers, a rather unreliable witness, who, after Poe had died, claimed that “The Raven” and “Ulalume” were plagiarized from two of his poems,(47) takes up the story. He met Poe in New York soon after the July number of the Knickerbocker had appeared, in which Clark had denounced the writer of the “Peter Snook” article. “Edgar A. Poe,” wrote Chivers, was “as drunk as an Indian.” He joined him nevertheless, and they

met Lewis Gaylord Clark, the editor of the Knickerbocker Magazine. The moment Poe saw him — maddened by the remembrance of something [page 102:] that he had said in a recent Number of the Magazine touching one of his own articles which had appeared in the Broadway Journal — he swore, while attempting to rush away from my hold, that he would attack him. ... Clark was then talking with another man; but as soon as this man saw the determined attitude of Poe, he immediately left him and went on his way — when Poe approached him, giving him his hand. As Clark responded to Poe's offer of his hand, he exclaimed, “Why, Poe! is this you?” “Yes, by G—d! this is Poe?” answered he; “Here is my friend Dr C — from the South.” “What!” exclaimed Clark, giving me his hand — ”Dr. C., the author of so many beautiful poems?” “Yes, by G—d” said Poe — ”Not only the author of some of the beautifullest Poems ever written any where, but my friend, too, by G—d!” I was very much pleased, said I, with Willis Gaylord Clark's Poems. “Yes, he was a noble fellow,” said Clark, “and I am his twin-brother!” “Good Lord!” said I, internally — while Poe looked Good Lord all over — exclaiming in a rather belligerent tone, “What business had you to abuse me in the last Number of your Magazine?” “Why, by G—d Poe!” exclaimed Clark, siding off towards the curbstone of the pavement — ”how did I know the Article referred to, was yours? You had always attached your name to all your articles before, and how, in H—l, did I know it was yours?”

By this time Clark had completely bowed himself away from the middle of Nassau Street, on his way to his office.

Poe, then, turning suddenly round to me, and locking his arm in mine, and pulling me impetuously along, with him, in a self-consciousness of his triumph, exclaimed in an indignant chuckle — ”A d—d coward! by G—d!” and went on his way rejoicing.(48)

When Poe, on August 23, in writing an obituary of Dr. James McHenry, pointed out that, as a literary critic, McHenry had fallen victim to the maliciousness of a clique, which had systematically written him down and which afterward had no scruples in publicly boasting of the triumph,(49) Clark preferred to ignore the unmistakable allusion to himself and company, apparently recognizing the truth of the charge and perhaps remembering his recent encounter with Poe. Clark, in fact, did not spoil for an editorial fight with Poe again until November. In the meantime, the Broadway Journal with due justice noticed that the September number of the Knickerbocker “has a remarkably pleasant appearance and abounds in good things; which no one can better supply than its editor — when he feels [page 103:] ‘in the vein.’ ”(50) And again in October — with Poe now in full editorial control — the Journal remarked that the “Knickerbocker for October is unusually good. ...(51)

The antagonism that Clark had withheld from venting on Poe for a few months he released on Cornelius Mathews in a review of his Big Abel, and the Little Manhattan.(52) In asserting that the volume contained mere commonplaces when it did not involve “ridiculous verbal imitations of Dickens and Carlyle,” Clark committed the libel of remarking that one cannot help thinking that Mathews “has ‘a screw loose’ somewhere in his mental machinery. ...

Poe, incensed at the imputation of insanity in an ostensibly literary review, made his comment in the Broadway Journal:

The Knickerbocker Magazine, for November, is really beneath notice and beneath contempt. And yet this work was, at one time, respectable. We should regret, for the sake of New York literature, that a journal of this kind should perish, and through sheer imbecility on the part of its conductors. Its present circulation, we believe, is not more than 1400 at the most. Its friends should come to its rescue.(53)

But Duyckinck had far more at stake than Poe. That he was a very close friend of Mathews was as widely known as the fact that he was the editor of the Library of American Books in which series Big Abel had appeared. Duyckinck, signing himself “S. T.,” wrote a furious denunciation of Clark and submitted the article broadcast to the journals, some of which were sufficiently in sympathy with his views to publish it — namely, the New York Evening Mirror, the New York Weekly Mirror, the New York Morning News, and Godey's Lady's Book:(54)

During eight years the Knickerbocker Magazine has published various attacks upon Mr. Mathews and his writings, with a malignity [page 104:] and pertinacity which once induced the Tribune to call loudly for the private reasons which instigated such a course. It has misrepresented and traduced him in many ways by mistatements [sic], by partial quotations, by hints and inuendos [sic] and all the machinery which a little mind knows so well to employ for its ends; the titles of his books have been misquoted falsely; paltry insinuations of an injurious character, as to his private dealings with publishers have been made; his writings have been systematically depreciated; and according to a cheap and favorite argument with this journal, it has been suggested that he is out of his mind. So John Neal was called in the Knickerbocker “crazy Neal.” It is time this should cease, or that the Knickerbocker should be put into Coventry by the respectable press.

Duyckinck added that the Knickerbocker selected high game and cited Simms and Poe as two of his examples.

After Duyckinck's article appeared, Poe published these remarks on the front page of the Broadway Journal:

The Knickerbocker Magazine has received a severe rebuke from the city press, during the last week, for some peculiarities in its general conduct, and especially for the spirit and letter of an article in the last number, upon Mr. Mathews. The inquiry has arisen in many quarters, what has Mr. Mathews done ... that he should be pilloried in the small print and pelted with the pleasant missives of the “Editor's Table?” Better dine with Duke Humphrey than sit down to the scraps and cheese-parings of such a table.(55)

Clark had had formal opportunities for attacking Poe when two of his books appeared during the year: the Tales (June) and The Raven and Other Poems (November), but he failed to take advantage of either — for a time. Moreover, these books had appeared in the very series (Library of American Books) in which Big Abel had appeared, a series Poe felt called upon to defend by defending the works recently issued in that series — namely, Simms's and Mathews’. Poe's stake was more than personal. As he observed later, Duyckinck, as editor of Wiley and Putnam, “afforded unwonted encouragement to native authors by publishing their books, in good style and in good company, without trouble or risk to the authors themselves, and in the very teeth of the disadvantages arising from the want of an international copyright law.”(56) Thus, on October 4, 1845, he [page 105:] had called Simms's Wigwam and the Cabin “decidedly the most American of American books,” declaring that all the stories in it had merit, and gave it as his “deliberate opinion” that, despite certain faults, Simms was, upon the whole, “the best novelist which this country has produced. ...(57) And again, in the January, 1846, number of Godey's Lady's Book, Poe observed:

Had he been a Yankee, his genius would have been rendered immediately manifest to his countrymen, but unhappily (perhaps) he was a southerner, and united the southern pride — the southern dislike of making bargains — with the southern supineness and general want of tact in all matters relating to the making of money. His book, therefore, depended entirely upon its own intrinsic value and resources, but with these it made its way in the encl.(58)

Poe had also reviewed Big Abel in the November, 1845, number of Godey's, but unable to muster any enthusiasm for the work, he suspended his critical judgment and dutifully declared: “This is by all means an original book ... a book especially well adapted to a series which is distinctly American.” He allowed that its “chief defect is a very gross indefinitiveness, not of conception, but of execution . ... Out of ten readers nine will be totally at a loss to comprehend the meaning of the author. Of course, nothing so written can hope to be popular; but we presume that mere popularity is by no means Mr. Mathews’ intention.”(59)

Poe's critical indulgence provided Clark with the opportunity to satirize both his assailants in the December number of the Knickerbocker: “What a pudder our last number has created among two or three inferior members of the small ‘Mutual Admiration Society,’ who for ‘mutual’ ends swear just now by the author of ... ‘Great [sic] Abel,’ but usually by each other recriprocally! “Clark amusedly observed that the writer in the Mirror (“S. T.”) regrets the Knickerbocker's “‘attacks upon our best writers,’ including especially the author of ... ‘Big Abel’. ... ” In the Morning News, Clark continued, “the same commentator complains of our notice of ‘Big Abel’ as ‘a [page 106:] departure from common decency, purporting to be a criticism’ ... ” Clark then speculated that Poe was the author of both the “S.T.” articles he had alluded to: “Probably it is the same writer who adopts or dictates kindred ‘reasoning’ with the foregoing in a weekly journal [Broadway Journal] now living; a print which in one number deems the Knickerbocker ‘utterly beneath notice and beneath contempt’ ... ” Irony aside, Clark went on, he wanted to “justify ourselves from the serious charge of uttering slanderous words,” and to that purpose he would “waste a leaf or two of our Magazine. ... ” He said that no publisher ever twice made the mistake of publishing Mathews; that he had been given Big Abel to review and he had reviewed it honestly; that the press of the country had been even harsher than he in his condemnation of Mathews. He himself had a great regard for Mathews as a gentleman, but not, unfortunately, as a writer. Because Mathews was an American, patriotism would lead him “rather to exaggerate than lessen his merits; and if he were only half as good as Dickens, we should likely think him superior.” He trusted that “our readers will not charge us with manifesting any thing like a disposition to decry our own authors. Our sins all lie in an opposite direction.” He then called his remarks on Big Abel “candid and forbearing,” and could scarcely understand why Mathews should talk about a libel suit, or why the “Forcible-Feeble of a weekly sheet” (Poe) should inform the publisher of the Knickerbocker that “our Magazine was doomed.” Clark then cited the London Spectator to second his opinion that Big Abel was incomprehensible, after which he quoted Poe, “the personal friend and client of Mr. Matthews [sic], his admirer and reviewer, the Aristarchus of the Ladies’ Magazines”: “ ‘It's [sic] (Big Abel's) chief defect is a very gross indefinitiveness, not of conception, but of execution. (What chiefer defect could it have?) Out of ten readers, nine will be totally at a loss to comprehend the meaning of the author! Of course, nothing so written can hope to be popular.’ “Of course not, Clark commented, for “in works of humor, popularity is an infallible test.” In summarizing, he said that Big [page 107:] Abel “is an utterly incomprehensible farrago, or rather, that the only comprehensible thing about it is a very palpable aim to copy the peculiarities of Boz.” He then quoted an article from the North American Review of April, 1844, that had condemned Mathews, and wondered why his complainants did not pounce upon that magazine “for its bold heresy.” Why didn’t they “pretend that that grave Quarterly journal is influenced by ‘personal malignity’ toward Mr. Matthews, as it is that the Knickerbocker is thus actuated. It is, in fact, ‘as easy as lying,’ to assume that position, in relation to either publication.” All that he liked about Mathews was his choice of American subjects and his advocacy of international copyright, but in the latter instance, he asserted, he does the cause infinite harm, since influential men refuse to play second fiddle to Mathews. As an author, the only way Mathews could pass without ridicule was to pass without observation.(60)

Clark, assuming that Poe was the writer of the “S. T.” articles and resenting him now with rankling bitterness, proceeded to review The Raven and Other Poems in the next number of the Knickerbocker.(61) A possible explanation of Clark's failure to review the Tales is that the book was successful, selling more than fifteen hundred copies in less than three months,(62) and that Clark did not wish to fly too obviously in the face of public opinion. His review, as might be expected, was hardly a consideration of Poe's poetry so much as a sustained sneer at the poet himself. Clark quoted passages from Poe's preface, the better to mock at him. Then, singling out the famous declaration, “With me poetry has not been a purpose, but a passion,” he noted how pitiable and meager were the results of that passion, although Poe had reached the age “at which all the great poets produced their great works.” He then derided Poe's claim to precocity by saying: “We ... are disposed to [page 108:] believe the author, and should believe him if he said the same of the poems we have read.” Then he charged Poe with having only an “aptitude for rhythm”; said that his criticisms of poetry seemed written after a very thorough cramming of Blair's lectures and the essays of Lord Karnes; recalled an earlier assertion made by Poe that “there cannot be such a thing as a didactic poem,”(63) and from this unqualified premise deduced the absurd conclusion that Poe thinks a “poem is a metrical composition without ideas.” Not only his best poems, Clark declared, but many of Poe's criticisms were composed on this principle, “words being the sole substance in them.” Clark then accused Poe of having drawn upon Tennyson in writing “Lenore,”(64) and proceeded to find humor in the vagueness of some of Poe's titles, as, for example, “To the River ——,” “as though there were something mighty private or naughty in his address to a running stream, which might compromise its character, if known.”

Clark continued his gibing by adding that “there are very few boys who have not written scores of verses like this; but very rarely do they publish such verses when they become men.” Poe's poetical reputation, Clark contended, rested mainly on “The Raven,” but even that poem “will not bear scrutiny.” Clark then declared how magnanimous he was being in this “review”:

If we were disposed to retort upon Mr. Poe for the exceedingly gross and false statements which, upon an imaginary slight [! ], he made [page 109:] in his paper respecting this Magazine, we could ask for no greater favor than to be allowed to criticize his volume of poems. Surely no author is so much indebted to the forbearance of critics as Mr. Poe, and no person connected with the press in this country is entitled to less mercy and consideration. His criticisms, so called, are generally a tissue of coarse personal abuse or personal adulation. ... But criticism is his weakness. ... In ladies’ magazines, he is an Aristarchus, but among men of letters his sword is a broken lath.

Immediately following this treatment of Poe's poems appeared Clark's review of Longfellow's Poems. A eulogy of Longfellow, it was at the same time a scarcely veiled attack on Poe who, in the first half of the preceding year, had gained a wide, if mixed, reputation by leveling charges of plagiarism and imitation against Longfellow. The review concluded with this statement:

The pretentious and the self-conceited, the ‘neglected’ and the soured, among our self-elected poets, may be pardoned for decrying that excellence [of Longfellow's poetry] they cannot reach. Again we commend Mr. Longfellow's beautiful volume to a wide public acceptance. A more appropriate and admirable present for the new year, let us add ‘in season,’ could no where be found.(65)

Poe was aware of these comments but he saw fit to ignore them. In the meantime, he had obtained an appointment to read a poem before the Boston Lyceum. Whether Poe could not write a poem to order for the occasion or whether he wanted to hoax the Bostonians is a question that need not detain us at this point, except to note that the episode created a furor and was editorially discussed in numerous journals, in and against Poe's favor. Clark, always alert for material that could be quoted to Poe's disparagement, picked up this item and published it in the February number of the Knickerbocker: “The Boston Morning Post, in commending the review of Mr. Poe's poems in our last number, takes exception to the inference which might be drawn from our remarks, that Mr. Poe really ‘humbugged’ the courteous people of Boston. ... In justice to the Bostonians, we make the annexed extract from the ‘Post's[‘] notice. ... ” The extract stated that Poe spoke before a large audience; that he recited in a “baby voice”; that few could [page 110:] tell whether it was prose or poetry he was delivering, “had it not been for the sing-song reading of the author”; that the reaction of those who heard the poem was “expressed by nods, winks, smiles and yawns”; and that almost half the audience had left the hall before Poe concluded. The extract Clark quoted ended: “Let us hear no more of this ‘humbugging’ the Bostonians, who from kindly feelings to a stranger heard in silence that which they knew was balderdash, or who silently left a place from which they felt the ‘poet’ ought to have been expelled. And yet he boasts of his conduct!”(66)

Shortly afterward, Poe's “Literati of New York City,” ominously subtitled, “Some Honest Opinions at Random Respecting Their Autorial Merits, with Occasional Words of Personality,” was awaiting publication in Godey's Lady's Book. When in May, 1846, the first series appeared, it created such a demand that Godey had to put out extra editions of the magazine and finally reprint the series along with the second series in the June number. Only two of the eight articles that constituted this first series could have offended Clark. The first was the introduction in which Poe touched upon Longfellow, who, he alleged, had a “whole legion of active quacks at his control” — an allusion to Clark, who had puffed Longfellow continually in the Knickerbocker. The second was the sketch of Charles F. Briggs (“Harry Franco”), in which Poe said that Briggs was “grossly uneducated” and a contributor to the Knickerbocker.

But what offended Clark most was the news that he himself was to be included in the Literati papers. He had heard the information from Louis Godey himself. As Godey reported the incident in “A Card” published in the New York Evening Mirror on May 8, 1846:

When during a recent visit to New York, the subscriber [Godey] informed Mr. Lewis Gaylord Clark that Mr. Poe had him ‘booked’ in his ‘Opinions of the New York Literati,’ he supposed that he was giving Mr. Lewis Gaylord Clark a very agreeable piece of information; as it must have been quite apparent to the gentleman himself, that [page 111:] his natural position was not among the literati, but sub-literati of New York; and he ought to have been greatly surprised and gratified to find himself placed in such agreeable company. But it seems that, on the contrary, the information that Mr. Lewis Gaylord Clark received has put him in a perfect agony of terror.

Thus apprised, Clark had his attack on Poe ready for the May number of the Knickerbocker:

There is a wandering specimen of ‘The Literary Snob’ continually obtruding himself upon public notice; today in the gutter, tomorrow in some milliner's magazine; but in all places, and at all times, magnificently snobbish and dirty, who seems to invite the ‘Punchy’ writers among us to take up their pens and impale him for public amusement. Mrs. Louisa Godey [a slur on Mr. Louis Godey] has lately taken this snob into her service in a neighboring city, where he is doing his best to prove his title to the distinction of being one of the lowest of his class at present, infesting the literary world. The ‘Evening Gazette and Times’ speaks of our literary ‘snob’ as one ‘whose idiosyncrasies have attracted some attention and compassion of late;’ and adds: ‘We have heard that he is at present in a state of health which renders him not completely accountable for all his peculiarities!’ We do not think that the ‘ungentlemanly and unpardonable personalities of this writer,’ of which our contemporary complains, are worthy of notice simply because they are so notoriously false that they destroy themselves. The sketch, for example, of Mr. Briggs, Marry Franco,’) in the paper alluded to, is ludicrously untrue, in almost every particular. Who that knows ‘Harry Franco,’ (whose prose style Washington Irving pronounced ‘the freshest, most natural and graphic he had met with,’) would recognize his physical man from our ‘snob's’ description? But after all, why should one speak of all this? Poh! Poe! Leave the ‘idiosyncratic’ man ‘alone in his glory.’(67)

The “Card” in which Godey had advertised the fact that he had informed Clark of his inclusion in the Literati papers was, of course, a rebuke of Clark for this scurrilous attack. Godey went on to say in that card that Clark's “desperation is laughably exhibited in the insane attack he has made on Mr. Poe, in the Knickerbocker for May, where Mr. Poe is represented as [page 112:] imbecile from physical infirmity, and at the same time is threatened with impalement. It would undoubtedly afford the public much amusement to witness an attempt on the part of Mr. Lewis Gaylord Clark to impale Edgar A. Poe. ... ” Godey then said that it takes a “born blockhead” to make the blunder of asserting that Mr. Poe's personalities are not worthy of notice and that they destroy themselves, and then proceed to make them the subject of special notice in an attempt to destroy the writer, “even descending to the heartless and cruel insinuation, that illness has weakened the powers of his mind.” Godey concluded:

The subscriber has been repeatedly advised to discontinue the publication of ‘Mr. Poe's articles on the New York Literati.’ It will be readily perceived, however, that such a course on his part would be as indelicate and unjust towards Mr. Poe, as it would be ungrateful towards the public, who have expressed distinct and decisive approbation of the articles in that unmistakeable [sic] way which a publisher is always happy to recognize.

The unmistakable way, of course, was sales, and according to Griswold, who had no reason to favor Poe, “three editions were necessary to supply the demand for some numbers of the magazines containing them.”(68)

In September, Poe's attack on Clark appeared, even as Godey had promised. He began with the familiar gibe that “Mr. Clark is known principally as the twin brother of the late Willis Gaylord Clark” and added: “He is known, also, within a more limited circle, as one of the editors of ‘The Knickerbocker Magazine.’ “Poe spoke of the “editorial scraps” to be found at the back of each number of the Knickerbocker — an allusion to Clark's own “Editor's Table,” a famous feature of the magazine — as “the joint composition of a great variety of gentlemen,” which it was in the sense that Clark was in the habit of quoting in that Table, as we have seen, items from newspapers, magazines, and correspondents. “Were a little more pains taken in elevating the tone of this ‘Editors’ Table,’ (which its best friends are forced to admit is at present a little Boweryish),” [page 113:]

Poe went on, deliberately misplacing the apostrophe and, at the same time, alluding to such vulgar attacks as those that appeared there on Cornelius Mathews and himself, “I should have no hesitation in commending it ... as a specimen of ... easy writing and hard reading.” Then, speaking of Clark's other contributions to the magazine, Poe remarked that the style of them “has its merits, beyond doubt, but I shall not undertake to say that either ‘vigor,’ force’ or ‘impressiveness’ is the precise term by which that merit should be designated. Mr. Clark once did me the honor to review my poems [an allusion to Clark's recent treatment of The Raven volume], and — I forgive him.”

When Poe turned to a discussion of the Knickerbocker itself, he said that it seemed “to have in it some important elements of success”: its title was good, it had some eminent contributors, “although none of these gentlemen, continue their contributions”; the printing and paper have been excellent; and — a loaded remark — ”there certainly has been no lack of exertion in the way of what is termed ‘putting the work before the eye of the public.’ “

Still some incomprehensible incubus has seemed always to sit heavily upon it, and it has never succeeded in attaining position among intelligent or educated readers. On account of the manner in which it is necessarily edited, the work is deficient in that absolutely indispensable element, individuality. As the editor has no precise character, the magazine, as a matter of course, can have none. When I say “no precise character,” I mean that Mr. C., as a literary man, has about him no determinateness, no distinctiveness, no saliency of point, — an apple, in fact, or a pumpkin, has more angles. He is as smooth as oil or a sermon from Dr. Hawks; he is noticeable for nothing in the world except for the markedness by which he is noticeable for nothing.

Poe then mischievously speculated about the current circulation of the Knickerbocker and arrived at the ridiculously low figure of “some fifteen hundred copies.”(69)

In a final paragraph, Poe offered a description of Clark, his characteristic way of ending all these sketches. In doing this, [page 114:] he overestimated Clark's age by four or five years, said that his “forehead is, phrenologically, bad — round and what is termed ‘bullety’ [and that] ... the smile is too constant and lacks expression.”(70)

Considering Clark's recent remarks on Poe in his “review” of The Raven volume and in “The Literary Snob,” this sketch was less harsh than Clark had reason to expect. Nevertheless, Poe seems to have irritated all the sore points of Clark, for when Clark prepared his retort for the October number of the Knickerbocker, he was fouler than he had been:

Our thanks are due to ‘J. G. H.,’ of Springfield (Mass.,)(71) for his communication touching the course and the capabilities of the wretched inebriate whose personalities disgrace a certain Milliner's Magazine in Philadelphia; but bless your heart, man! you can’t expect us to publish it. The jaded hack who runs a broken pace for common hire, upon whom you have wasted powder, might revel in his congenial abuse of this Magazine and its Editor from now till next October without disturbing our complacency for a single moment. He is too mean for hate, and hardly worthy scorn. In fact there are but two classes of persons who regard him in any light — those who despise and those who pity him; the first for his utter lack of principle, the latter for the infirmities which have overcome and ruined him. Here is a faithful picture, for which he but recently sat. We take it from one of our most respectable daily journals:

‘It is melancholy enough to see a man maimed in his limbs, or deprived by nature of his due proportions; the blind, the deaf, the mute, the lame, the impotent, are all subjects that touch our hearts, at least all whose hearts have not been indurated in the fiery furnace of sin; but sad, sadder, and saddest of all, is the poor wretch whose want of moral rectitude has reduced his mind and person to a condition where indignation for his vices and revenge for his insults are changed into a compassion for the poor victim of himself. When a man has sunk so low that he has lost the power to provoke vengeance, he is the most pitiful of all pitiable objects. A poor creature of this description called at our office the other day, in a condition of sad imbecility, bearing in his feeble body the evidences of evil living, and betraying by his talk such radical obliquity of sense, that every [page 115:] spark of harsh feeling toward him was extinguished, and we could not even entertain a feeling of contempt for one who was evidently committing a suicide upon his body, as he had already done upon his character. Unhappy man! He was accompanied by an aged female relative [Poe's mother-in-law, Mrs. Maria Clemm?], who was going a weary round in the hot streets, following his steps to prevent his indulging in a love of drink; but he had eluded her watchful eye by some means, and was already far gone in a state of inebriation. After listening awhile with painful feelings to his profane ribaldry, he left the office, accompanied by his good genius, to whom he owed the duties which she was discharging for him.’

Now what [Clark asked] can one gain by a victory over a person such as this? If there are some men whose enemies are to be pitied much, there are others whose alleged friends are to be pitied more. One whom this ‘critic’ has covered with what he deems praise, describes him as ‘a literary person of unfortunate peculiarities, who professes to know many to whom he is altogether unknown.’ Can it then be a matter of the least moment to us, when the quo animo of such a writer is made palpable even to his own readers, that he should underrate our circulation by thousands, overrate our age by years, or assign to other pens the departments of this Magazine which we have alone sustained, with such humble ability as we possessed, through nearly twenty-six out of its twenty-eight volumes? As well might Carlyle lament that he had called him an ‘unmitigated ass,’ or Longfellow grieve at being denounced by him as ‘a man of no genius, and an inveterate literary thief.’(72) And as to his literary opinions, who would regard them as of any importance? — a pen-and-ink writer, whose only ‘art’ is correctly described by the ‘London Athenaeum’ to ‘consist in conveying plain things after a fashion which makes them hard to be understood and commonplaces in a sort of mysterious form, which causes them to sound oracular.’ There are times,’ continues the able critical journal from which we quote, ‘when he probably desires to go no farther than the obscure; when the utmost extent of his ambition is to be unintelligible; that he approaches the verge of the childish, and wanders on the confines of the absurd! ‘ We put it to our Massachusetts correspondent, whether such a writer's idea of style is at all satire-worthy? And are we not excused from declining our friend's kindly-meant but quite unnecessary communication?(73)

Here for the first time — three years before his death — we have in print the allegations so familiar these days — that Poe [page 116:] was a “wretched inebriate”; that he was a “hack ... for common hire,” which is to say that he tailored critical opinions to order for a price; that he had an “utter lack of principle”; that he had certain unspecified “infirmities” that had ruined him; and that his friends, whom he witlessly maligned in praising, were aware of his “unfortunate peculiarities.” Lest readers of the Knickerbocker should regard these views of Poe as aroused and distorted by rancor, Clark “corroborated” them by citing apparently impartial opinions to indicate that his views were universally held. He alluded to an unnamed correspondent, “J.G.H.” He “quoted” an article from an unidentified “respectable” newspaper (whether Poe actually “sat” for such a portrait is questionable, since no mention of Poe appears in the extract that Clark purported to quote and since a diligent search has failed to uncover the article in question). And he cited the London Athenaeum. Thus, J. G. H.'s view of Poe is by implication so much harsher than Clark's and even, perhaps, so obscene that “man! you can’t expect us to publish it.’‘ Thus, from the second source, real or invented, there are further charges: “imbecility,” “evil living,” “radical obliquity of sense,” and “suicide” upon body and character. Moreover, Poe is shown to be in the care of a keeper, and that an “aged female relative,” whose task is to prevent him from drinking — a woman upon whom he is utterly dependent but whom he should be comforting if he had any conscience at all — all of which so pains the compassionate writer that he proceeds to smear the “poor creature” in his “respectable” paper. And thus, in the third and only identified source, there appear to be further heinous charges, but ones which only assert that Poe was pretentious at times or obscure or even absurd in his stories, though Clark fobbed off these adjectives, not in relation to Poe's stories and poems, as the Athenaeum had, but to his “literary opinions.”(74) What Clark failed to mention is just as illuminating, that the Athenaeum habitually found fault with American writers, especially with their addiction to English [page 117:] models, and that, for example, only recently the Athenaeum had accused Longfellow of imitation.(75)

Thus wrote, quoted, and commented the editor of the Knickerbocker whose complacency, so he averred, was not ruffled for a moment. So unruffled was he that he added this controversial footnote, obviously to assign a discreditable motive to Poe's attacks on him in the Literati series, that of vengeance for the rejection of a number of his manuscripts by Clark:

He is equally unknown to those whom he abuses. The Editor hereof has no remembrance of ever having seen him save on two occasions. In the one case, we met him in the street with a gentleman [Chivers?], who apologized the next day, in a note now before us, for having been seen in his company ‘while he was laboring under such an excitement;’ in the other, we caught a view of his retiring skirts as he wended his ‘winding way,’ like a furtive puppy with a considerable kettle to his tail, from the publication-office, whence — having left no other record of his tempestuous visit upon the publisher's mind than the recollection of a coagulum of maudlin and abusive jargon — he had just emerged, bearing with him one of his little narrow rolls of manuscript, which had been previously submitted for insertion in our ‘excellent Magazine,’ but which, unhappily for his peace, had shared the fate of its equally attractive predecessors.

For reasons given earlier, the first of Clark's statements — that he had rejected a manuscript of Poe's — is extremely doubtful. And if the second statement implies that Clark repeatedly rejected a number of Poe's manuscripts, then the statement is plainly false and casts even greater doubt on the veracity of the first statement. Moreover, Clark claimed to have met Poe on only two occasions — both, as he described them, decidedly unfavorable to Poe. He may have been merely forgetful in neglecting to mention a time when he and Poe, among others, proposed toasts at the booksellers’ dinner held in New York City on March 30, 1837.(76) [page 118:]

But Poe had not discharged all his cannon. Godey's Lady's Book carried in its next number Poe's paper on Charles Fenno Hoffman. Here Poe wrote:

Mr. Hoffman was the original editor of “The Knickerbocker Magazine,” and gave it while under his control a tone and character, the weight of which may be best estimated by the consideration that the work thence received an impetus which has sufficed to bear it on alive, although tottering, month after month, through even that dense region of unmitigated and unmitigable fog — that dreary realm of outer darkness, of utter and inconceivable dunderheadism, over which has so long ruled King Log the Second, in the august person of one Lewis Gaylord Clark.(77)

Clark retaliated the following month by discharging two attacks on Poe. One was in the form of doggerel, no doubt written by Clark himself, since he had referred to Poe as “Aristarchus” and “Poh” in many of his diatribes. The subtitle seems to be a strained pun on Poe, pooh, and pro in the expression pro pudor (for shame):

Epigraph on a Modern ‘Critic.’

‘P’oh’ Pudor!’

‘Here Aristarchus lies! ‘ (a pregnant phrase,

And greatly hackneyed, in his early days,

By those who saw him in his maudlin scenes,

And those who read him in the magazines.)

Here Aristarchus lies, (nay, never smile,)

Cold as his muse, and stiffer than his style;

But whether Bacchus or Minerva claims

The crusty critic, all conjecture shames;

Nor shall the world know which the mortal sin,

Excessive genius or excessive gin!(78)

The second attack(79) — not only on Poe, but on Simms, Duyckinck, and Mathews as well — began with a quotation [page 119:] from the North American Review, whose favorite poet — Longfellow — Poe had attacked during 1845. First of all, Clark, quoting and agreeing with the North American, charged that the Library of American Books (edited by Duyckinck and published by Wiley and Putnam) “with the exception of a few of the volumes, is not likely to do much honor to American literature.” Secondly, Clark suggested in a footnote, Duyckinck, for the sake of helping his friend Mathews, had been dishonest with his employers in that, “through a misunderstanding, or without their knowledge,” Big Abel had been announced as a forthcoming book in the series. Clark, together with the North American Review, wondered

what can have seduced these respectable publishers into printing, as one of the series, that indescribably stupid imitation of Dickens, entitled and called ‘Big Abel and Little Manhattan;’ a contribution to the patriotic native American literature a good deal worse than the very worst things of ‘The Yemassee’ and ‘Guy Rivers.’ Surely, surely, this dismal trash cannot have been seriously chosen as a fit representation of American originality, in a ‘Library of American Books’. ...

In “justice to the enterprising publishers,” Clark explained in the footnote alluded to, Mathews had insisted upon the publication of Big Abel, even though Wiley and Putnam had offered him a hundred dollars to release them from an obligation they had inadvertently incurred.

Having disposed of Mathews in this way, Clark turned to Simms, again quoting the North American but omitting its praise:

The author of these novels means to be understood as setting up for an original, patriotic, native American writer; but we are convinced that every judicious reader will set him down as uncommonly deficient in the first elements of originality. He has put on the castoff garments of the British novelist, merely endeavoring to give them an American fit; and ... there is in his literary outfits a decided touch of the shabby genteel.

Clark continued:

These works, with the ‘Tales of Edgar A. Poe,’ who is described. [by the North American Review] as ‘belonging to the forcible-feeble and shallow-profound school,’ are pronounced ‘poor materials for an American Library.’

... Now the preceding forcible and candid comments upon the productions of Mr. Simms, and those of a writer or two of kindred [page 120:] pretensions ... are quite coincident with our own expressed opinions in these pages.

The last of Poe's Literati papers appeared in the October number of Godey's. He ended them, he wrote his young admirer, George W. Eveleth, because they were considered “elaborate criticisms when I had no other design than critical gossip,” and because the “unexpected circulation of the series, also, suggested to me that I might make a hit and some profit, as well as proper fame, by extending the plan into that of a book on American Letters generally, and keeping the publication in my own hands.” Poe also commented in that letter:

My reference to L. G. Clark, in spirit but not in letter, is what you suppose. He abused me in his criticism — but so feebly — with such a parade of intention & effort, but with so little effect or power, that I — forgave him: — that is to say, I had little difficulty in pardoning him. His strong point was that I ought to write well, because I had asserted that others wrote ill — and that I didn’t write well because, although there had been a great deal of fuss made about me, I had written so little — only a small volume of zoo pages. Why he had written more himself!(80)

Having blackened Poe to the limits of his ability, and Poe refraining from giving further offense, Clark seemed satisfied to let the quarrel lapse. Only once before Poe died did Clark mention him again, and then only under the exigency of having to defend himself against charges of personal malice toward Mathews, Simms, and Poe. That occasion was in January, 1848, when Clark found an article in Blackwood's Magazine that, he thought, would acquit him of the charges and prove him an honest editor. He wrote:

In connexion with two or three of our contemporaries, we have been accused of having been actuated by personal prejudice in our notices of ... Mr. Cornelius Mathews, and of ... Mr. W. Gilmore Simms. This, as our readers are aware, we have not only disclaimed, but have repeatedly shown, by passages from other reviews of these writers, that our own impression of their characteristics was held in common with the public and the highest literary authorities of the country. We have quoted, for example ... the ‘North-American Review,’... and we now find our opinions fully confirmed on the other side of the water, by a journal obviously as uninfluenced by personal bias as [page 121:] have been the judgments of the ‘North-American’ and the Knickerbocker.

Having suggested that a universal opinion could be adduced from two instances, Clark then quoted the article in Blackwood's to discredit Mathews and Simms and to redeem himself. Finished with those authors, he turned to Poe:

Of Mr. Poe's ‘Tales’ the reviewer remarks, that while they cannot be called common-place, they evince little taste and much analytic power. One is not sorry to have read them — one has no desire to read them twice. His style ‘has nothing peculiarly commendable; and when the embellishments of metaphor and illustration are attempted, they are awkward, strained, and infelicitous. The effect of his descriptions, as of his story, depends never upon any bold display of the imagination, but on the agglomeration of incidents, enumerated in the most veracious manner.’ Such is the tenor of the article in Blackwood, which is written in an evident spirit of candor, and with much discrimination.(81)

Poe died on October 7, 1849, and Griswold, friend of Clark, began to edit his works. The first two volumes entitled The Works of the Late Edgar Allan Poe: With Notices of His Life and Genius by N. P. Willis, J. R. Lowell, and R. W . Griswold appeared in January, 1850. The “Notice” by Griswold was simply a republication of the “Ludwig” smear of Poe, now acknowledged, that had originally been printed in the New York Tribune two days following Poe's death. This edition, if we are to credit such articles as that which appeared in the March, 1850, number of the Southern Literary Messenger, was, ironically enough, used for the very kind of humbuggery that Poe had decried throughout his critical career. Written by John M. Daniel, editor of the Richmond Examiner and a man whom Poe claimed to have challenged to a duel, the article, scathing as it was of Poe, was scathing of his editor also, although Daniel made the mistake of assuming that Willis and Lowell were co-editors. With vitriol, Daniel asserted that Griswold, Willis, and Lowell

felt quite pitifully sentimental at his dog's death; and with the utmost condescension they hearkened to the clink of the publisher's silver, and agreed to erect a monument to the deceased genius, in the shape of Memoir and Essay preliminary to his works. Their kindness [page 122:] and their generosity has been published to the world in every newspaper. The bookseller's advertisement, that all persons possessing letters and correspondence of Poe should send them straightway to him has gone with the news. The publication of the works of Poe were kept back from the public for a long time, that they might be brought out in a blaze of glory. ... Here it is at last — and duty compels us to say, that this is the rawest, the baldest, the most offensive, and the most pudent humbug that has been ever palmed upon an unsuspecting moon-calf of a world. These three men ... have practiced in the publication as complete a swindle on the purchaser as ever sent a knave to the State prison.(82)

In addition to such reports, violent protest was aroused against the two-volume edition by such men as George R. Graham, who knew Poe far better than Griswold and who felt that Griswold had not only betrayed a trust but had taken revenge upon a dead man. In his magazine, he published an open letter to Nathaniel Willis, in which he declared the Griswold Notice of Poe to be “unfair and untrue. ... It is Mr. Poe, as seen by the writer while laboring under a fit of the nightmare. ... ” He then inquired into the reasons for this vilification of Poe:

Mr. Griswold ... has allowed old prejudices and old enmities to steal ... into the coloring of his picture. They were for years totally uncongenial, if not enemies. ... He had, too, in the exercise of his functions as critic, put to death, summarily, the literary reputation of some of Mr. Griswold's best friends; and their ghosts cried in vain for him to avenge them during Poe's life-time — and it almost seems, as if the present hacking at the cold remains of him who struck them down, is a sort of compensation for duty long delayed — for reprisal long desired but defered [sic].(83)

He added that literature was a religion to Poe and that, as its high priest, he scourged the money-changers from the temple with a whip of scorpions. [page 123:]

Clark, who publicly stated that he had known Griswold for nearly the entire period of his connection with the Knickerbocker, and with whom Griswold almost became an associate editor on that magazine, felt impelled, as usual, to aid his friend, and what better way than to vilify Poe still further? Yet it must have posed something of a dilemma to Clark to have to defend the editor and, at the same time, to attack his subject. He began his review quite promisingly: “The intellectual character of the late Mr. Poe may now be examined, and its qualities decided upon, without any of those disadvantages which his personal conduct constantly presented as barriers to the fair appreciation of his genius.” But the promise failed. Clark pointed out that Poe was “destitute of moral or religious principle,” and that, although “very few of our American authors have possessed more of the creative energy or of the constructive faculty,” Poe was “frequently a plagiarist of both thoughts and forms.”(84) Then, significantly, he stressed “literary thefts” which Griswold himself did not point out in print until his greatly enlarged biographical sketch of Poe appeared in the third volume of the edition: The Literati: Some Honest Opinions about Autorial Merits and Demerits, With Occasional Words of Personality ... By Edgar A. Poe ... with a Sketch of the Author, by Rufus Wilmot Griswold.(85) This volume was issued about the middle of September, 1850, more than half a year after Clark's review appeared. Clark asserted that “The Pit and the Pendulum” was plagiarized from “Vivenzio, or Italian Vengeance” and from a tragic scene of the German, E. T. A. Hoffmann. An investigator has shown, however, that a “careful search through the tales of Hoffmann reveals no story of a pendulum used as an instrument of torture,” and that if Poe borrowed in this instance, it was not from “Vivenzio,” but from a tale called “The Iron Shroud” by [page 124:] William Mumford. The conclusion is that the Knickerbocker's “reviewer's wish was evidently father to the thought.”(86)

Clark then maintained that Poe's “charge of plagiarism against Professor Longfellow, we happen to know, was so false that the plagiarism was on the other side [sic].” Longfellow, although he recognized the accusation to be absurd, did not protest this statement until September 28, and then not to Clark, who originally made it in print, but to Griswold.(87)

As to Poe's criticisms, Clark found them “acute and ingenious, in some respects; but for the most part [they] are carping, and entirely worthless, for any judgments they embrace of books or authors; he was so much the creature of kindly or malicious prejudice, or so incapable of going beyond the range of the grammarian.”

When the third volume of Poe's works appeared, containing the Griswold version of the Literati series, Clark was not happy. He found himself and many of his friends being served up again for public amusement. It was inevitable that he should write: “On the score of entertainment of any sort ... or of good taste, we trust these disjointed criticisms ... are not considered by their editor as presenting any considerable claim to the regard of the public. Indeed, we have his implied judgment in this respect.” Then he remarked that, having “in a notice of the first and second volumes of the present series” already expressed his judgment of Poe's writings, he would now content himself with a “synopsis of the extraordinary career of the author as furnished us by Dr. Griswold in a biography accompanying the work.”(88)

We may well question the authenticity of the “synopsis” by “Dr.” Griswold, a man who had balked at little to malign Poe. He had circulated stories that Poe had had “criminal relations” with his mother-in-law, Mrs. Clemm.(89) He had seized an [page 125:] opportunity, two days after Poe's shocking death, to publish in the Tribune a pseudonymous smear of the man in the form of a characterization of Poe, much of which was, in fact, taken almost verbatim from Bulwer's characterization of Francis Vivian in The Caxtons. He had tailored a dead man's text for his own purposes so as to alienate by intent even such a friend of Poe as Duyckinck.(90) He had twisted some strands of truth with so many falsifications and half-truths in the Memoir he prefixed to The Literati volume that no one has yet quite untangled the snarl. And finally, though it has not yet been conclusively proved, he had probably pocketed a profit from the sales of the works of the very man he had so used. Such vilification no literary figure ever suffered; and when we consider that this Memoir, coming as it did from the “approved” editor of Poe, was reproduced “as authentic in all save a very few of the contemporary notices of Griswold's edition,” as well as in “virtually every other edition of Poe's writings that appeared during the first two decades after the poet's death,”(91) we can understand how far-reaching and deep-rooted became the calumny, and how it must have exceeded Griswold's most sanguine expectations.

Clark, having reiterated many of the Griswold villainies, then repeated precisely what he himself had charged in his earlier review, and for which he now pretended to find support [page 126:] in the Griswold Memoir: “... Poe's plagiarisms are ... pronounced by his biographer as ‘scarcely paralleled in literary history.’ He accused Mr. Longfellow, for example, of a plagiarism from himself, when it turned out that the poem of Longfellow was written two or three years before the publication of that by Poe, and was, during a portion of that time, in Poe's possession. His unsupported literary opinions [note the non sequitur] could rarely be received with credit.”

Clark was referring here to Griswold's charge that Poe's “Haunted Palace,” which had been widely circulated in “The Fall of the House of Usher,” was plagiarized from Longfellow's “Beleaguered City.” Poe, as early as 1841, had anticipated such a charge in the prospect of having his poem published with Longfellow's in Griswold's edition of Poets and Poetry of America (1842), and had called Griswold's attention to Longfellow's possible plagiarism from him, even citing proof of prior publication.(92) Nevertheless, Poe must have appeared so hateful to Griswold personally — granted that Poe had given him some provocation — that Griswold had an overmastering compulsion to make Poe universally hated. Thus, despite the evidence in his possession, he made Poe appear to be the plagiarist of Longfellow.

Longfellow himself, much as he had reason to dislike Poll, balked at the deception. In his letter to Griswold, dated September 28, 1850, he denied the charge made in the Memoir, saying that “The Beleaguered City” “was written on the nineteenth of September, 1839. I marked the date down at the time!”(93) But Longfellow's denial is not needed on this point, except to demonstrate that both Clark and Griswold were colluding in “hacking at the cold remains,” to use Graham's phrase. “The Haunted Palace” had appeared in the Museum as a separate publication in April, 1839. Clearly, both Clark and Griswold were parties to deliberate falsehoods. To concur in a truth is simple; to concur in a lie betrays collaboration. [page 127:]

In November, 1856, after a passage of six years, Clark quoted the North American Review, since it contained a harsh article on Poe. The passages Clark reprinted were only re-phrasings of the charges trumped up by Clark and Griswold. A significant passage which Clark omitted to quote reads:

Cliquism was the citadel of wrong against which he brought to bear all the power of his editorial battery whenever he could command the use of a press. Cliquism was the one thing which he hated more intensely than he could express (he never happened to be one of a powerful clique) and the suspicion that certain literary circles looked upon him with disfavor or contempt so embittered his feelings and distorted his vision, as to make him no less unjust to them, than he fancied they were disposed to be towards him.

This omitted passage also states that Poe approached “the American Parnassus ... with all the enginery he could command or invent, — by sapping, mining, blasting, bombardment, stratagem, and storm; his shafts being ever the more keen and swift when aimed at the highest heads.”

Having quoted the now familiar allegations against Poe, Clark appended his approval: “True, every word of it: as is also the subsequent remark that the secret of Poe's impotency over the public taste’ — for he had no literary influence what-ever — ‘lies in the fact that his critical reviews, like all that he wrote, were destitute of moral sentiment.’ “The writer in the North American Review had concluded with a prayer for some “potent chemistry to blot out from our brain-roll for ever beyond the power of future resurrection, the greater part of what has been inscribed upon it by the ghastly and charnel-hued pen of Edgar Allan Poe. Rather than remember all, we would choose to forget all that he has written.” Clark concluded by recommending the number of the North American Review “most cordially to our readers.”(94)

Godey, in whose magazine the Literati papers, as well as a number of other Poe articles and stories, had first appeared, [page 128:] wrote to Clark to say that he was not to be counted among those to whom Poe was alleged to have been faithless. Clark replied by evading responsibility for the accusation, and used his typographical tricks to imply that Godey was certainly exceptional: “Mr. L. A. Godey ... writes us to say, that he is not to be ‘counted in’ among those in Philadelphia to whom the late Edgar A. Poe proved faithless, in his business and literary intercourse. His conduct toward Mr. Godey was in all respects honorable and unblameworthy. The remark which elicits the note of Mr. Godey was copied as a quotation into our pages from the North-American Review’ in a recent notice of that venerable and excellent Quarterly.”(95)

Clark's last public strike at Poe was made four years later when he reviewed Sarah Helen Whitman's defense of Poe, Edgar Poe and His Critics (1860). A widow, she had been engaged to Poe in 1848, but the notoriety he had gained during his crack-up period and his strange behavior at the time caused her to break the engagement. Poe, pleading with her, had written:

And you ask me why men so misjudge me — why I have enemies. If your knowledge of my character and of my career does not afford you an answer to the query, at least it does not become me to suggest the answer. Let it suffice that I have had the audacity to remain poor that I might preserve my independence — that, nevertheless, in letters, to a certain extent and in certain regards, I have been “success-ful” — that I have been a critic — and unscrupulously honest and no doubt in many cases a bitter one — that I have uniformly attacked —. where I attacked at all — those who stood highest in power and influence — and that, whether in literature or in society, I have seldom refrained from expressing, either directly or indirectly, the pure contempt with which the pretensions of ignorance, arrogance, or imbecility inspire me. — And you who know all this — you ask me why I have enemies.(96)

Belatedly contrite, Mrs. Whitman had written her small volume in defense of Poe's personal and literary reputation. Clark, in reviewing the work, said that the opinions of the Knickerbocker in regard to Poe had been recorded “frankly and conscientiously” several years earlier, and that “it would give us [page 129:] pleasure to add, that Mr. Poe's biographers had since given us occasion to change them,” implying, of course, that his opinions remained justifiably unchanged. Then, as usual, he resorted to quoting, this time the Baltimore Methodist Protestant. That paper had called Mrs. Whitman's book a noble effort, “but it does not wipe out the ... dishonorable records in the biography of Dr. Griswold. ... After reading it, we turned to Dr. Griswold's Memoir, and for the first time were able to peruse it without impatience and a sense of wrong to its subject.”(97)

It is true that Poe sometimes played favorites in his criticism and praised writers hardly better than those he derided; that he mistook cruelty for candor; that he sometimes attacked from the ambush of anonymity. But on the whole, allowing for these and similar gross faults, he began his journalistic career as a critic of high principles, and fearlessly asserted and applied those principles, whatever the occasion, the author, the publisher, or the coterie involved. But the literature in America of that time was, for the most part, incredibly bad. One need only read at random in the leading periodicals of the period — in Godey's, in Graham's, in the Knickerbocker, in the Mirror — to be convinced of that. To borrow a phrase from George E. Woodberry, no quotation can do sufficient justice to the writers of that time — they must be read to be properly damned. Moreover, the great books of the period were bound for commercial failure. We are told by the authority in the field that not a “single literary work of genuine originality published in book form before 1850 had any commercial value to speak of until much later, and most of our classics were financial failures.”(98) Such mediocrity prevailed, in fact, that it seemed a necessary qualification for commercial success. All this considered, it is hardly possible to believe that Poe and Hawthorne, Melville and Emerson, Thoreau and Whitman, could have survived as artists. As a practicing critic, a critic whose profession was criticism and who earned his livelihood chiefly by his criticism, [page 130:] Poe continually received from publishers and individual authors the books they were marketing. Bad as most of them were, it was inevitable that Poe, given his standards and taste, should react to them in indignation, that he should slash at them in his reviews, and that his indignation should be exacerbated by those groups who imposed such works upon the public as monuments of American literature. Nothing, unless Poe abandoned his principles or his profession, could have stopped his clash with the authors, the publishers, and the cliques who wrote, published, and logrolled such works.

Graham, who knew Poe well, recognized Poe's essential critical integrity and the enmity he aroused by maintaining that integrity when he wrote, somewhat exaggeratedly, that his “pen was regulated by the highest sense of duty.” Graham also recognized, as few of us do today, that if Poe had compromised himself and puffed the authors he condemned and toadied to the coteries he despised, the doors of fortune would have swung open to him. In Graham's own powerful language:

Could he have stepped down and chronicled small beer, made himself the shifting toady of the hour, and with bow and cringe, hung upon the steps of greatness, sounding the glory of third-rate ability with a penny trumpet, he would have been feted alive, and, perhaps, been praised when dead. But no! his views of the duties of the critic were stern, and he felt that in praising an unworthy writer, he committed dishonor.(99)

The clash came with Poe's slashing review of Norman Leslie in 1835 and continued throughout his life. The men such as Clark who contended with him were, at first, only trying to starve him out as a writer by curtailing the sale of such works as Arthur Gordon Pym, or to destroy him as a critic, as they had destroyed Dr. James McHenry. Failing that, and finding that he was bringing the battle into their very camp, they then attacked him, not as a writer and critic any longer, but as a man, in order to bring him into such disrepute that his critical charges would not be credited. Then, and only then, were such rumors circulated as those alleging him to have carnal relations with his mother-in-law; then was he called a literary snob, [page 131:] today in the gutter and tomorrow in some milliner's magazine; then was he labeled a dirty critic who infested the literary world — a man tainted with alcoholism, immorality, plagiarism, and insanity.

The truth is that Poe, with all his failings, was as a critic successful to the point of his own undoing. Having allowed his enemies no ground on which to stand, he drove them to discredit his criticism by discrediting him as a human being — the familiar argumentum ad hominem whose fallaciousness we may all recognize but to whose contagion few of us are immune. In this they succeeded and so well that it may be forever impossible to deflate the Poe myth to its proper proportions.

The final irony is that the man most guilty of creating and circulating calumnies of Poe while Poe was alive enjoyed a reputation for humor and kindliness. In the words of Thomas Bangs Thorpe, a friend of Clark and a contributor to the Knickerbocker: “The intellectual peculiarity of Lewis Gaylord Clark was humor; with him it was, of course, instinctive and genuine. He was never else to the world than light-hearted, always kindly disposed, and ever discovering amusement. ... He viewed every thing, if you please, from a delicate, truly refined, and humorous stand-point. Nothing to him was really serious, yet he never was irreverent, unfeeling, or sarcastic.(100)


[[Footnotes]]

[The following footnotes appear at the bottom of page 86:]

1. See Killis Campbell, “The Poe-Griswold Controversy,” in The Mind of Poe and Other Studies (Cambridge, Mass., 1933), pp. 63-98.

2. The article first appeared in the New York Evening Mirror, III (Nov. 7, 1845), and was reprinted in the New York Weekly Mirror, III (Nov. 15, 1845), 96, as well as in part or in whole in Godey's Lady's Book, XXXII (May, 1846), 240, and in the New York Morning News, Nov. 8, 1845. The writer has been identified as Evert A. Duyckinck, a friend of Simms, by Mary C. Simms Oliphant et al., eds., The Letters of William Gilmore Simms (Columbia, S. C., 1953), II, 114 n. 338.

3. Ibid., pp. 115, 117. Both letters are dated Nov. 13, 1845.

4. Southern Literary Messenger, II (June, 1836), 460.

[The following footnotes appear at the bottom of page 87:]

5. T. O. Mabbott's suggestion in Dunlap, The Clark Letters, p. 16 n. 108.

[The following footnotes appear at the bottom of page 88:]

6. Benson J. Lossing (1813-1891), History of New York City (New York, 1884), pp. 360-362.

7. Ostrom, Poe's Letters, I, 74. Poe was not consistent in his spelling of “Phaall.”

8. Godey's Lady's Book, XXXIII (Oct., 1846), 159-162.

[The following footnotes appear at the bottom of page 89:]

9. Knickerbocker, IX, 529.

10. Ibid., XII (Aug., 1838), 167.

11. Ibid., XXVII (May, 1846), 450.

12. In a letter dated Nov. 2, 1834 (Dunlap, The Clark Letters, p. 83). William Gowans, a man who became a distinguished bookseller, bears out Clark's statement. He wrote that Pym “was the most unsuccessful of all his writings, although published by the influential house of Harper & Brothers, who have the means of distributing a single edition of any book in one week” (quoted by Quinn, Poe, p. 267).

13. See the New York Mirror, XVI (Aug. II, 1838), 55, for a curiously similar review.

[The following footnotes appear at the bottom of page 90:]

14. William F. Gill, The Life of Edgar Allan Poe (New York, 1877), p. 86.

15. According to Heartman and Canny, Poe Bibliography, pp. 39-40, Wiley and Putnam issued the volume in London in 1838 and a third edition — this one pirated — appeared in London in 1841 (not to mention numerous pirated editions that appeared subsequent to Poe's death). Judging from the remarks of another zealous bibliographer of Poe, who published his Edgar A. Poe: A Study (San Francisco, 1921) privately and anonymously, the first London edition of Pym, a mutilated version, appears to have been authorized by Harpers (or else Harpers sold the right to Wiley and Putnam), since that edition appeared “simultaneously” with the Harpers’ edition to protect the work under British copyright law. Contrast these statements with this of Griswold in his Memoir to Poe's Literati, p. xv: “The publishers sent one hundred copies to England, and being mistaken at first for a narrative of real experiences, it was advertised to be reprinted, but a discovery of its character, I believe, prevented such a result.”

16. Knickerbocker, XIV, 564.

17. Ibid., XV (April, 1840), 359.

[The following footnotes appear at the bottom of page 91:]

18. Heartman and Canny, Poe Bibliography, pp. 54-55.

19. In Doings of Gotham, ed. by Jacob E. Spannuth and Thomas Ollive Mabbott (Pottsville, Pa., 1929), p. 44, Mabbott remarks that Poe never contributed to either the Knickerbocker or the North American Review, “although at one time or another he succeeded in selling something to almost every other really important magazine of the time, and many unimportant ones.”

20. Heartman and Canny, Poe Bibliography, pp. 58-59.

[The following footnotes appear at the bottom of page 92:]

21. Knickerbocker, XVI (July, 1840), 88.

22. This letter is dated Sept. 19, 1841 (Ostrom, Poe's Letters, I, 183).

23. Godey's Lady's Book, XXXIII (Sept., 1846), 132.

24. Frank Luther Mott in American Journalism: A History of Newspapers in the United States Through 250 Years, 1690-1940 (New York, 1941), p. 319, notes that the “Knickerbocker's chief rival after 1841 was the Philadelphia Graham's Magazine.”

[The following footnotes appear at the bottom of page 93:]

25. The announcement of “Flaccus” “as a permanent contributor of this Magazine” appeared in the Knickerbocker, XV (Jan., 1840), 88.

26. Graham's Magazine, XXII (March, 1843), 195-198.

27. Poe seemed to have a fondness for throwing books to pigs, the implication being that they would be more digestible to pigs than to human beings. He used the expression, for instance, to conclude his reviews of William Harrison Ainsworth's Guy Fawkes (Graham's Magazine, XIX, Nov., 1841, 249) and Henry B. Hirst's The Coming of the Mammoth ... and Other Poems (Broadway Journal, II, July 12, 1845, 8).

28. Herman E. Spivey in his article “Poe and Lewis Gaylord Clark,” Publications of the Modern Language Association, LIV (Dec., 1939), 1124-1132, discusses the various opinions respecting the authorship of this article and cites evidence to prove that it was written by Poe. In the light of the information I have assembled, I second Spivey's judgment. Such statements as the “only redeeming quality which we ... can find in this gentleman, is in the fact that he is the brother of the late Willis G. Clark,” the laudation of the “old” Southern [page 94:] Literary Messenger, and the treatment of Griswold leave positive clues to the authorship of the article.

[The following footnotes appear at the bottom of page 94:]

29. New World, VI (March I1, 1843), 302-303. Park Benjamin, himself a caustic critic “hated and feared by many of his contemporaries” (Taft, Minor Knickerbockers, p. 403), for reasons best known to himself, allowed the article to appear, although he had once shared the editorship of this selfsame paper with Griswold and Sargent (see Knickerbocker, XXXVI, Aug., 1850, 168).

30. Knickerbocker, XXVIII (Oct., 1846), 368 n.

[The following footnotes appear at the bottom of page 95:]

31. Sargent's response to “Our Magazine Literature” appeared in Sargent's New Monthly Magazine, I (April, 1843), 192. Sargent took issue with what he called “two injurious untruths,” but never so much as suggested, as Clark does by the words “rejected contributor,” that the anonymous writer ever submitted that article to his magazine.

32. The allusion to “a small volume ... in ‘a third edition’ “appears aimed at Poe's Poems of 1831, which purported to be a second edition, either because Poe considered this volume a revision of Al Aaraaf, Tamerlane, and Minor Poems (1829) or because he wanted to encourage sales.

33. Knickerbocker, XXI (April, 1843), 380.

[The following footnotes appear at the bottom of page 96:]

34. New World, VI (March II, 1843), 303.

35. Knickerbocker, XXII (July, 1843), 89.

36. XXIII, 113-117.

[The following footnotes appear at the bottom of page 97:]

37. Knickerbocker, XXII (Oct., 1843), 392.

[The following footnotes appear at the bottom of page 98:]

38. Messenger, X, 719-727; Broadway Journal, II, 33-39.

39. XXVII (Feb., 1845), 49-53.

40. I, 143-145.

[The following footnotes appear at the bottom of page 99:]

41. Knickerbocker, XXV (March, 1845), 282.

42. Ibid., XXV (April, 1845), 368.

43. Broadway Journal, I (May io, 1845), 297, and I (June 7, 1845), 363.

44. Ibid., I, 354-357.

[The following footnotes appear at the bottom of page 100:]

45. Knickerbocker, XXVI (July, 1845), 76.

[The following footnotes appear at the bottom of page 101:]

46. II, 11.

47. For the merits of Chivers’ claim, see Joel Benton, In the Poe Circle (New York, 1899) and Foster Damon, Thomas Holly Chivers: Friend of Poe (New York, 1930).

[The following footnotes appear at the bottom of page 102:]

48. Richard Beale Davis, ed., Chivers’ Life of Poe (New York, 1952), pp. 57-59.

49. Broadway Journal, II, 110.

[The following footnotes appear at the bottom of page 103:]

50. Ibid., II (Sept. 6, 1845), 138.

51. Ibid., II (Oct. 11, 1845), 213.

52. Knickerbocker, XXVI (Nov., 2845), 451-453.

53. II (Nov. 8, 1845), 276.

54. The passage is quoted from the Weekly Mirror, III (Nov. 15, 1845), 96, but see note 2 above for citation of other sources in which the article has been found.

[The following footnotes appear at the bottom of page 104:]

55. II (Nov. 15, 1845), 284.

56. Godey's Lady's Book, XXXIII (July, 1846), 15-16.

[The following footnotes appear at the bottom of page 105:]

57. Broadway Journal, II, 130-131.

58. XXXII, 41-42.

59. XXXI, 218-219.

[The following footnotes appear at the bottom of page 107:]

60. XXVI, 579-583.

61. XXVII (Jan., 1846), 69-72.

62. According to Poe in the Broadway Journal, II (Oct. 25, 1845), 200. Poe's assertion is borne out by the fact that Wiley and Putnam, the publishers of the Tales, brought out his poems as well, which indicates that the Tales must have more than paid for the publication costs and that the publishers expected additional profits from an edition of the poems.

[The following footnotes appear at the bottom of page 108:]

63. Poe, taking issue with the “heresy of The Didactic” in many a review, had asserted in Graham's Magazine, XX (March, 1842), 189-100, that didacticism as a purpose is detrimental to poetry and that the didactics of Longfellow — Clark's friend — ”are all out of place. ... We do not mean to say that a didactic moral may not be well made the under-current of a poetical thesis; but that it can never be well put ... obtrusively forth. ... ” In “The Philosophy of Composition” (1846) Poe took issue with Clark and proceeded to elucidate his “real meaning, which some of my friends have evinced a disposition to misrepresent.” He explained again that Beauty, not truth, should be the object of a poem, and that it by no means followed from anything he had said that truth may not be introduced into a poem, so long as it was properly subordinated to “that Beauty which is ... the essence of the poem.”

64. The charge that Poe was an imitator of Tennyson was first made in an anonymous article called “The Poets of America” and appeared in the Foreign Quarterly Review, XLIV (Jan., 1844), 321-322. The article, which is examined in the next chapter, gained wide notoriety, and Clark, in echoing the accusation, was simply capitalizing on a ready-made situation.

[The following footnotes appear at the bottom of page 109:]

65. Knickerbocker, XXVII (Jan., 1846), 72-73.

[The following footnotes appear at the bottom of page 110:]

66. Ibid., XXVII, 184. The article appeared in the Boston Post on Jan. 14, 1846.

[The following footnotes appear at the bottom of page 111:]

67. XXVII, 461. Despite all efforts to find the article in the New York Evening Gazette and Times which Clark alluded to, nothing remotely corresponding to Clark's “quotation” from that paper can be found, either by myself or by two other persons who were kind enough to double- and triple-check my own fruitless searches. Was the item faked? The passage beginning, “There is a wandering specimen ... ,” and ending, “infesting the literary world ... ,” was copied with minor typographical differences in the Boston Evening Transcript, May 5, 1846.

[The following footnotes appear at the bottom of page 112:]

68. Memoir to The Literati, pp. xxii-xxiii. Godey in his magazine, XXXII (May, 1846), 240, also reprinted the “S.T.” article to indicate, among other things, that Clark's suggestion that Poe was insane was typical of his attacks.

[The following footnotes appear at the bottom of page 113:]

69. Spivey, whose Ph.D. dissertation was a study of the Knickerbocker, states in “Poe and Lewis Gaylord Clark,” p. 1131, that the circulation of the Knickerbocker was very much greater than five thousand in 1846.

[The following footnotes appear at the bottom of page 114:]

70. Godey's Lady's Book, XXXIII, 132.

71. “J. G. H.” of Springfield, Mass., may have been Josiah Gilbert Holland (1819-1881) or merely a crank. It is curious to note that an “H. G. J.” (a reversal of these initials), also of Springfield, Mass., was respectfully informed in Godey's Lady's Book, XXXIII (Nov., 1846), 240, “that we cannot republish any article in our ‘Book,’ especially the one he refers to — biographical notice of L. Gaylord Clark. He is referred to the September number of our magazine, which he can either buy or borrow.”

[The following footnotes appear at the bottom of page 115:]

72. Although in quotation marks, the statement respecting Longfellow is not Poe's. On the contrary, Poe repeatedly declared that Longfellow had genius, but that he abused it with imitativeness and, at times, with outright plagiarism, as well as with didacticism. Similarly, but of far less consequence, Poe did call Carlyle an ass, but not an unmitigated one.

73. XXVIII, 368-369.

[The following footnotes appear at the bottom of page 116:]

74. See the Athenaeum, No. 957 (Feb. 28, 1846), pp. 215-216.

[The following footnotes appear at the bottom of page 117:]

75. See, for instance, ibid., No. 950 (Jan. 20, 1846), pp. 35-36, and No. 959 (March 14, 1846), pp. 266-267.

[The following footnotes appear at the bottom of page 117, running to the bottom of page 118:]

76. See the New York Commercial Advertiser, XL (April 3, 1837), which shows that Clark's toast preceded Poe's by only eight short toasts. The toasts Clark and Poe offered are revealing: Clark proposed “Protection to Home Manufactures, whether of the hands or of the intellect.” Poe proposed, with [page 118:] what appears to be his usual taste for hoaxing, “The Monthlies of Gotham — Their distinguished Editors, and their vigorous Collaborateurs.”

[The following footnotes appear at the bottom of page 118:]

77. XXXIII (Oct., 1846), 158.

78. Knickerbocker, XXVIII (Nov., 1846), 425.

79. Ibid., XXVIII, 452. The article from which Clark quoted may be found in the North American Review, LXIII (Oct., 1846), 357-381. The North American noticed the Knickerbocker only to condemn it. It appears that Clark had published an article disparaging C. C. Felton, a professor of Greek literature at Harvard and a favorite and apparently an assistant editor of the North American Review. In retaliation, the North American wrote: “But we cannot express our astonishment that ... it should have been allowed to appear in a magazine once so respectable as The Knickerbocker” (LXV, July, 1847, 242). For a similar instance, see the North American Review, XLIV (Jan., 1837), 270-272.

[The following footnotes appear at the bottom of page 120:]

80. Letter dated Dec. 15, 1846 (Ostrom, Poe's Letters, II, 332).

[The following footnotes appear at the bottom of page 121:]

81. Knickerbocker, XXXI, 68-71.

[The following footnotes appear at the bottom of page 122:]

82. XVI, 173. See also ibid., p. 192, in which the owner and editor of the Messenger, John R. Thompson, apologized to Willis and Griswold, making a conspicuous exception of Lowell, who had become an active abolitionist, for the article's appearing during his absence. Thompson and Clark seem to have been friends. In the Messenger, XVI (Feb., 1850), 127, Thompson acknowledged “with pleasure the handsome manner in which our friend of The Knickerbocker is pleased to speak of us. Praise from such a source is worth something. If it were necessary, we could have the heart to give it back tenfold.” And Clark in the Knickerbocker, XLVI (Oct., 1855), 424, spoke of “our friend ... John R. Thompson, Esq., of the ‘Southern Literary Messenger’. ...

83. Graham's Magazine, XXXVI (March, 1850), 224-226.

[The following footnotes appear at the bottom of page 123:]

84. Knickerbocker, XXXV (Feb., 1850), 163-164.

85. This sketch “was transferred to the first volume on the publication of a second edition in 1853, and it continued to occupy this position on the publication of an edition of four volumes in 1856.” See Campbell, The Mind of Poe, p. 74 n. 1, which also gives his reasons for dating the sketch “about the middle of September, 1850.”

[The following footnotes appear at the bottom of page 124:]

86. D. L. Clark, “The Sources of Poe's ‘The Pit and the Pendulum,’ “Modern Language Notes, XLIV (June, 1929), 349-356. See also the Griswold sketch in The Literati volume, p. xxxii, in which Griswold repeated the identical charges.

87. See Quinn, Poe, p. 674, for Longfellow's letter to Griswold.

88. Knickerbocker, XXXVI (Oct., 1850), 370-372.

89. Quinn, Poe, p. 680.

[The following footnotes appear at the bottom of page 125:]

90. Whatever reasons Griswold had — to hurt Duyckinck, to make him hostile to Poe's memory, to forestall the charges he must have anticipated were forthcoming from him, or to defame Poe by showing him to be treacherous — he interpolated a phrase in one of the Poe letters he quoted: “The last selection of my tales was made from about seventy by [one of our great little cliquists and claquers] Wiley and Putnam's reader, Duyckinck.” (Compare the Griswold distortion in his Memoir in The Literati volume, p. xxxi, with the original phrasing in Ostrom's edition of the Letters, II, 328.) Sad to say, Griswold succeeded to the extent that Duyckinck declared in a review of The Literati volume (Literary World, VII, Sept. 21, 1850, 228) that Poe was “a literary attorney, who pleaded according to his fee” — a charge that had not occurred to him before and one that, together with similar statements, has helped in shaping the Poe myth. Nevertheless, in the same article, Duyckinck asked this embarrassing question, which waited until 1941 for Arthur Hobson Quinn to answer in his biography of Poe, when he proved that Griswold had not only tampered with Poe's text, but had published forged versions of some of Poe's letters: Why, if Griswold was purporting to present an accurate record of Poe's opinions, was the record “purged of any unhandsome references to Dr. Griswold?”

91. Campbell, The Mind of Poe, p. 77.

[The following footnotes appear at the bottom of page 126:]

92. The letter is dated May 29, 1841 (Ostrom, Poe's Letters, I, 160-161).

93. For the dating of these poems and for Longfellow's letter to Griswold, see Quinn, Poe, pp. 271, 674.

[The following footnotes appear at the bottom of page 127:]

94. Knickerbocker, XLVIII, 517-518. The review which Clark quoted in part appeared in the North American Review, LXXXIII (Oct., 1856), 427-455. Mott (American Magazines, II, 243) attributed this article to a Mrs. E. V. Smith. No one by that name has been located; I think it a pseudonym, and not a woman's but a man's. Quinn (Poe, p. 685) referred to the writer as “he,” and I think legitimately.

[The following footnotes appear at the bottom of page 128:]

95. Ibid., XLIX (Jan., 1857), 106.

96. The letter is dated Oct. 18, 1848 (Ostrom, Poe's Letters, II, 394).

[The following footnotes appear at the bottom of page 129:]

97. Knickerbocker, LV (April, 1860), 429.

98. Charvat, Literary Publishing in America, p. 23.

[The following footnotes appear at the bottom of page 130:]

99. Graham's Magazine, XXXVI (March, 1850), 226.

[The following footnotes appear at the bottom of page 131:]

100. Harper's New Monthly Magazine, XLVIII (March, 1874), 587-592.


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Notes:

None.

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[S:0 - PLB, 1963] - Edgar Allan Poe Society of Baltimore - Bookshelf - Poe' Literary Battles (Moss)