Text-02a — “Imitation” — 1827 — (Speculated faircopy
manuscript Poe prepared for publication. This manuscript has not survived, but this version is presumably
recorded in Text 02b.)
Text-02b — “Imitation” — 1827
— TAOP — (Mabbott text A — This is Mabbott's copy-text for
“Imitation.”)
Text-03a — “To — —” — 1827-1828 — (The changes
are so great in the next text, that one must presume some kind of working draft, from which the fair copy of
Text-03b was created. Only five lines of the original poem, with only four as a recognizable block, are
represented in the new version. This draft copy has not surivived, but the final result of this version is
presumably recorded in Text-03b.)
Text-03b — “To — —”
— about 1828 — “Wilmer” manuscript (this page now lost, but text recorded by Stedman
and Woodberry about 1894, in their notes to the poems, 10:228) — (Mabbott text A1) (Having had the
poems set in type for the book, Poe appears to have sent the manuscripts for “Al Aaraaf,”
“Tamerlane,” “To” (“Should my early life seem”) and
“Fairyland” to John Neal, who printed exerpts. Neal may have returned the manuscripts as portions
of “To” and the earlier version of “Tamerlane” were retained by L. A. Wilmer. The
manuscript has never been described, but based on the other suviving pages of the Wilmer collection, it was
written on off-white sheets of paper, using dark brown ink and a careful script. The length of the poem
indicates that it would have been written on the front and back of one separate leaf, with odd pages numbered
in the upper right corner and even ones in the upper left corner. At this point, Poe had not yet adopted the
style of printing in imitation of type, nor the practice of connecting pages by using wax to form a roll.)
Text-03c — “To — —”
— 1829 — ATMP — (Mabbott text C1 — This is Mabbott's copy-text for
“To — —”) (Two minor verbal differences between the printed text and the Wilmer
manuscript suggest that they were made in proof during the typestetting process.)
Text-04 — “[[To — —]]” — about 1830-1831
Text-04a — “[[To — —]]” — about 1830-1831 —
(speculated portions of the text, in preparation for the publication of POEMS, where it was
incorporated as a new final stanza for “Tamerlane,” so that this revision no longer has its own
title. As a short section of a poem, it is possible that Poe wrote out a new manuscript for this section, or
that he cut the lines out of pages from ATMP. Preparations for various poems that appeared in the new
edition probably resulted in Poe using up his own copy of ATMP. This draft has not survived, but is
presumably recorded in Text-04b. Additional minor changes may have been made in proof. during the production
of POEMS.)
Text-04b — “[To —
—]” — 1831 — POEMS (incorporated into “Tamerlane” as section
XXIV) — (Mabbott text D1)
Text-05 — “For Annie” — late 1848
or early 1849 — “Annie” manuscript — (Mabbott text A2) (This manuscript has a title,
and only the second stanza. The title may be an after-thought, added only because he decided to send it to Annie
Richmond, which he did in a letter dated March 23, 1849. As a fairly short poem, it is a likely guess that this
form is a transitional text, which Poe expanded to the fuller form now know prior to sending it for publication,
and thus this draft was no longer necessary.)
Text-06a — “To ——” — late 1848 or early 1849 —
(speculated draft of the new version of the poem, from which Poe made the fair copy draft sent to the editor
of the Flag of Our Union for publication. This manuscript has not survived, but is presumably reflected
in Text-06b. As for manuscripts of “Ulalume” and “Annabel Lee,” Poe presumably took
this copy with him on his 1849 trip to Richmond. He may have given the manuscript to someone, although that
detail is unrecorded and the manuscript itself appears to be lost.)
Text-06b — “To —” —
about August 1849 — Richmond Examiner proof sheets — (Mabbott text C2) —
(Although the printing in the Flag of Our Union was early enough in the year that Poe should have been
able to receive a copy, the reversion back to the earlier title suggests that Poe had with him in Richmond his
slightly earlier draft manuscript.)
Text-07a — “A Dream within a Dream” — early 1849 —
(Speculated fair copy of the new version of the poem, with the revised title and two minor verbal changes,
sent to the editor of the Flag of Our Union for publication. This manuscript has not survived, but is
presumably reflected in Text-07b.)
Text-07b — “A Dream within a
Dream” — March 31, 1849 — Flag of Our Union — (Mabbott text B2) (For
Griswold's 1850 reprint of this version in Works, see under reprints,
below.)
Manuscripts and Authorized Printings (extracts):
“To — —” —
December 1829 — Yankee (excerpts only) — (Mabbott text B1)
Reprints:
“To —” — 1830 — Baltimore Minerva and Emerald
(printed as part of a review of ATMP)
“A Dream within a Dream” —
1850 — WORKS — Griswold reprints Text 11 — (Mabbott text D2 — This is
Mabbott's copy-text for “A Dream Within a Dream”) (Griswold presumably used an unmodified
clipping from the Flag of Our Union.)
“A Dream Within a Dream” — 1852 — Tales of Mystery and Imagination
and Humour; and Poems, London: Henry Vizetelly (An undated edition appears about the same time, published by
Charles H. Clark and Samuel Orchart Beeton, and their name appears as publisher for the second series), second
series p. 157. (with no woodcut illustration)
“A Dream within a Dream” — March 14, 1858 — Shippensburg News
(Shippensburg, PA), vol. XIII, no. 38, p. 1, col. 5 (acknowledged as by “Edgar Allan Poe.”)
“To —— ——” — May 21, 1864 — as part of
“Literariana” in Roundtable (New York, NY), p. 361 (apparently reprinted from ATMP)
“A Dream within a Dream” — October 26, 1864 — Vicksburg Herald
(Vicksburgh, MS), vol. 1, no. 101, p. 1, col. 4 (acknowledged as by “Edgar Allen [[Allan]] Poe.” It
follows a short poem by H. W. Longfellow called “Resignation.”)
“A Dream within a Dream” — March 19, 1867 — Spirit of Democracy
(Woodsfield, OH), vol. XXIV, no. 3, p. 1, col. 2 (acknowledged as by “Edgar Allen [[Allan]] Poe.”
“A Dream within a Dream” — April 5, 1867 — Emporia News
(Emporia, KS), vol. 10, no. 14, p. 1, col. 4 (with the brief introductory note “The English language
furnishes few instances where so much pathos is intensified in so few words as in the following poem by Edgar
Poe.”
“A Dream within a Dream” — April 26, 1867 — Wilimington Journal
(Wilimington, NC), vol. 23, no. 11, p. 1, col. 2 (acknowledged as “By Edgar Allen [[Allan]] Poe)
“[A Dream within a Dream]” — June 20, 1867 — Democratic
Enquirer (M’arthur, Vinton County, OH), Vol. 1, no. 22, p. 1, bottom of col. 3 (acknowledged as by
“Edgar A. Poe”)
“A Dream within a Dream” — November 2, 1867 — Montana Post
(Virginia City, Montana), vol. 4, no. 11, p. 7, col. 1 (acknowledged as by “Edgar A. Poe)
“A Dream within a Dream” — December 26, 1867 — Weekly Ottumwa
Courier (Ottumwa, IA), vol. 12, no. 46, p. 1, col. 3 (It is prefaced by a brief note: “The English
language furnishes few instances where so much pathos is intensified in so few words as in the following poem by
Edgar A. Poe:”)
“Is It But a Dream?” — January 16, 1868 — Petaluma Weekly Argus
(Petaluma, CA), vol. XIII, no. 49, p. 1, col. 2 (acknowledged as by “Poe”)
“A Dream within a Dream” — September 24, 1869 — Eastern State
Journal (White Plains, Westchester County, NY), vol. XXV, no. 22, p. 1, col. 5 (acknowledged as by “E.
Allan Poe”)
“A Dream within a Dream” — November 6, 1873 — North Carolina
Gazette (Fayetteville, NC), vol. ?, p. 4, col. 1 (acknowledged as by “Edgar A. Poe.”)
“A Dream within a Dream”
— 1875 — The Works of Edgar Allan Poe, vol 3: Poems and Essays, ed. J. H. Ingram, Edinburgh,
Adam and Charles Black (3:27-28)
“A Dream within a Dream” — January 8, 1876 — Jacksonville
Republican (Jacksonville, AL), vol. 38, whole no. 2021, p. 1, col. 7 (acknowledged as by “Edgar A.
Poe”)
“A Dream within a Dream” — February 24, 1876 — Windham Journal
(Whindham, Green Co., NY), vol. 19, no. 50, p. 1, col. 2 (acknowledged as by “Edgar A. Poe”)
“Imitation” — June 1876 — John H. Ingram, “The Unknown Poetry of
Edgar Poe,” Belgravia: A London Illustrated Magazine (London, UK) (29:511-512) (reprinted from the
recently discovered copy of TAOP from the British Museum, and thus the first reprint of this early version
of the poem since 1827) (Ingram's text makes what appear to be editorial adjustments, such as rendering
Poe's somewhat affected “unfathom’d” as “unfathomed” and modifying the use of
commas, but does not sustain R. H. Shepherd's charge that Ingram's printed text is “shown to be
valueless on account of its inaccuracies.”)
“Imitation” — June 8, 1876 — John H. Ingram, “Poe's
Suppressed Poetry,” New York Graphic, p. 805 (reprinted from Belgravia for June 1876)
“Imitation” — June 21, 1876 — John H. Ingram, “Unknown Poetry of
Poe,” Home Journal (New York, NY) (reprinted from Belgravia for June 1876)
“A Dream within a Dream” — July 13, 1884 — Brooklyhn Daily
Eagle (Brooklyn, NY), p. 2, col. 6 (acknowledged as by “Edgar Allan Poe” and printed in response
to an inquiry from a reader.)
“Imitation” — 1884 — Poems and Essays of Edgar Allan Poe, ed.
John H. Ingram, Leipzig: Bernard Tauchnitz (p. 156) (according to BAL, 7:136, issued as early as January 1884)
“Imitation” — 1884 — Tamerlane and Other Poems, ed. Richard
Herne Shepherd, London: George Redway (p. 49) (Having long been thought lost, a copy of the original
Tamerlane and Other Poems of 1827 was discovered in the British Museum and printed in this “second
edition.”)
“Imitation” — 1884 — The Tales and Poems of Edgar Allan Poe,
ed. John H. Ingram, London: John C. Nimmo (4:327)
“Imitation” — 1888 — The Complete Poetical Works and Essays on
Poetry of Edgar Allan Poe, ed. John H. Ingram, London and New York: Frederick Warne & Co. (p. 105)
“A Dream within a Dream” — February 5, 1896 — Lenoir Topic
(Lenoir, NC), vol. XXI, no. 18, p. 1, top of col. 2 (acknowledged as by “Edgar Allen [[Allan]] Poe.”)
“A Dream within a Dream” — July 24, 1897 — Scranton Tribune
(Scranton, PA), no volume or issue number specified, p. 12, col. 3 (acknowledged as by “Edgar Allen
[[Allan]] Poe”)
“[A Dream within a Dream]” — July 19, 1900 — Nashville American
(Nashville, TN), vol. XXIV, whole no 8620, p. 4, top of col. 5 (acknowledged as by “E. A. Poe.”)
“[A Dream within a Dream]” — January 7, 1904 — Boston Post
(Boston, MA), (no volume or issue number), p. 6, near the bottom of of col. 5 (the second stanza only, printed as
part of a short story, “Planes of Consciousness” by Mrs. Claude Montgomery, unacknowledged as by Poe.)
(the story, with the poem, was reprinted in the Buffalo Enquirer of Buffalo, NY, on January 21, 1904, p. 7)
“A Dream within a Dream” — January 23, 1909 — El Paso Herald
(El Paso, TX), vol. XXIV, whole no 8620, p. 20, col. 6 (acknowledged as by “Edgar Allen [[Allan]]
Poe.”) (printed to accompany an article about the Poe Centennial)
“For Annie” — January 1909 — Bookman (London, UK), vol. XXXV,
whole no. 208, p. 190, col. 1 (facsimile of the manuscript) (this facsimile is especially important as the
manuscript is currently unlocated)
“A Dream within a Dream” — December 9, 1909 — Fort Mill Times
(Fort Mill, SC), vol. XVIII, no 22, p. 2, col. 1 (acknowledged as by “Edgar Allan Poe.”)
“A Dream within a Dream” — May 6, 1916 — Fort Wayne News (Fort
Wayne, IN), vol. 42, p. 16, top of cols. 4-5
“A Dream within a Dream” — May 12, 1916 — Altoona Tribune
(Altoona, PA), vol. 61, p. 8, col. 5
“A Dream within a Dream” — May 22, 1916 — The Pantagraph
(Bloomington, IL), vol. LXX, no. 122, p. 11, col. 6
“A Dream within a Dream” — October 16, 1917 — Buffalo
Commercial (Buffalo, NY), p. 4, col. 4
“A Dream within a Dream” — January 20, 1918 — New York Tribune
(New York, NY), vol. LXXVII, whole no. 25,998, p. 38, col. 2 (printed as one of several poems appending an article
on “The Birthday of Unhappy Edgar Allan Poe.”)
Scholarly and Noteworthy Reprints:
“A Dream within a Dream”
— 1894-1895 — The Works of Edgar Allan Poe, vol. 10: Poems, eds. E. C. Stedman and G. E.
Woodberry, Chicago: Stone and Kimball (10:130, and p. 227-229) (In the notes, Stedman and Woodberry reprint the
full texts for “Imitation” and “To ——.”)
“A Dream within a Dream”
— 1902 — The Complete Works of Edgar Allan Poe, vol. 7: Poems, ed. J. A. Harrison, New York: T.
Y. Crowell (10:16, and 10:150-152) (In the notes, Harrison reprints the full texts for “Imitation” and “To ——,” but in both, Harrison seems to be copying
from the notes in Stedman and Woodberry.)
“To ——” —
1911 — The Complete Poems of Edgar Allan Poe, ed. J. H. Whitty, Boston and New York: Houghton Mifflin
Co. (p. 123, and pp. 273-275) (In the notes, Whitty reprints the full texts for “Imitation” and “To ——,” but, like, Harrison, Whitty seems to be copying both texts from the notes in
Stedman and Woodberry.)
“A Dream within a Dream”
— 1917 — The Poems of Edgar Allan Poe, ed. Killis Campbell, Boston: Ginn and Company (pp.
26-28, and pp. 161-163)
“A Dream within a Dream” — 1965 — The Poems of Edgar Allan Poe,
ed. Floyd Stovall, Charlottesville: The University Press of Virginia (p. 18, and pp. 180-183) (In his notes,
Stovall reprints the full text of the 1827 “Imitation” and the 1829 “To — —”)
“Imitation” — 1969
— The Collected Works of Edgar Allan Poe, vol. 1: Poems, ed. T. O. Mabbott, Cambridge: Belknap Press
of Harvard University Press (1:75-76) (Mabbott prints the three main versions of this poem as separate items,
although he notes in the descriptive text that they are related to one another.)
“To — —”
(“Should my early life seem”) — 1969 — The Collected Works of Edgar Allan Poe, vol. 1:
Poems, ed. T. O. Mabbott, Cambridge: Belknap Press of Harvard University Press (1:129-132)
“A Dream within a Dream”
— 1969 — The Collected Works of Edgar Allan Poe, vol. 1: Poems, ed. T. O. Mabbott, Cambridge:
Belknap Press of Harvard University Press (1:450-452)
“Imitation” — 1984 — Edgar Allan Poe: Poetry and Tales, ed.
Patrick F. Quinn (New York: Library of America) (p. 34) (reprints Text-02)
“A Dream within a Dream” — 1984 — Edgar Allan Poe: Poetry and
Tales, ed. Patrick F. Quinn (New York: Library of America) (p. 97) (reprints Text-07b)
“Un rêve dans un rêve” — 1862 — Contes inedts
d‘Edgar Poe, Paris: J. Hetzel, pp. 308-309 (French translation by William L. Hughes)
1980 - the movie “The Fog” (directed by John Carpenter) — The film begins
with the text, on screen, of the last two lines of “A Dream within a Dream” (with Poe's name, but
without the specific poem being noted.)
“A rêve dans un rêve” — dated 2009, but available in late 2008
— Poèmes d‘Edgar Allan Poe, Paris: Publibook (translation by Jean Hautepierre)
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Bibliography:
Heartman, Charles F. and James R. Canny, A Bibliography of First Printings of the Writings
of Edgar Allan Poe, Hattiesburg, MS: The Book Farm, 1943.
Mabbott, Thomas Ollive, ed., The Collected Works of Edgar Allan Poe (Vol 1
Poems), Cambridge, Mass.: The Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, 1969.
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[S:0 - JAS] - Edgar Allan Poe Society of Baltimore - Works - Poems - A Dream within a Dream