Text: Stuart and Susan Levine, “Index,” The Collected Writings of Edgar Allan PoeEAP: Critical Theory (2009), 219-229 (This material is protected by copyright)


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INDEX

Adventures of Arthur Gordon Pym, The: 2

“Al Aaraaf”: 11, 15n10, 18nn19-20, 99, 135n45

Alcott, Bronson: “Orphic Sayings,” 48n8

Aldrich, Mary A. S.: “The Water Lily,” 104, 137-38n59

Alfriend, Thomas: 202n7

Allan, Charles: “To the Nightingale,” 130n13

Allan, John: 27, 72n5

Allen, Hervey: Israfel: The Life and Times of Edgar Allan Poe, 46n5, 213

Allen, Michael: Poe and the British Magazine Tradition, 213

Alterton, Margaret G.: and Hardin Craig, Edgar Allan Poe: Representative Selections, with Introduction, Bibliography, and Notes, 213; Origins of Poe's Critical Theory, 48n7, 213

American Monthly Magazine, The: 97

“Angel of the Odd”: 131n23

Anthon, Charles: Elements of Latin Prosody and Metre, 131n24; A System of Greek Prosody and Metre, 136-37nn53-54

Apollo: 190, 207n26. See also Zoilus

Arcturus: 41-43, 47n7. See also Mathews, Cornelius

Aristophanes: “Clouds,” 91, 132n28

Aristotle: Nichomachean Ethics, 203n13; The Poetics, 4, 6, 13n6, 183, 213

Arms, George: “Tacitus and Those Goths in ‘Letter to B———,’ ” 15n12, 213

art: 26, 29, 30, 43, 44, 55, 56, 58, 63, 70: romantic, 74n20; of versification, 82, 148, 179, 185, 190

art for art's sake: xi, 38, 175; poem . . . for the poem's sake, 182

Arvin, Newton: Longfellow: His Life and Works, 142n85, 213

Axton, William F.: “Introduction” to Charles Robert Maturin, Melmoth the Wanderer, 14n8, 213

Bacon, Caleb: An Epitome of the English Language, 82, 128n5, 148

Bacon, Francis: 8, 14n9; “Baconially” 114, 140n79; Idol of the Theatre, 81, 127n3; Novum Organum, 81, 127n3

Baker, Thomas N.: Sentiment and Celebrity: Nathaniel Parker Willis and the Trials of Literary Fame, 134n43, 213

“Balloon-Hoax, The”: 140n81

Bancroft, George: 48n7

Barlow, Joel: The Columbiad[[, ]] 179, 200n5

Barrington, George Waldron: 8, 15n13

Baudelaire, Charles: 59

Baugh, Albert: A Literary History of England, 48n7

beauty: Aristotle and, 203n13; death of a beautiful woman, 65, 73-74n20, 176; landscape gardening and, 204n16; motto of “Ligeia,” 14; poetry and, x; 8, 38, 63-64, 68, 183, 184, 185, 188, 199, 210n35; poetry as rythmical creation of, 73n13, 204n17; supernal beauty, 198. See also truth

Beck, Charles: 130n17

Benjamin, Park: 97, 134n43

Benn, Gottfried: 59

Benton, Richard P.: “The Works of N. P. Willis as a Catalyst of Poe's Criticism,” xiin4, xiin7

Béranger, Pierre Jean de: 180, 201n6, 204n16

“Berenice”: 73n20

Bible references: Jeremiah 17:1, 31; Matthew 13:57 and Mark 6:4, 46n3

“Black Cat, The”: xiin1

Blackwood, Mr.: 77. See also “How to Write a Blackwood Article/A Predicament”

Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine”: 37

Blair, Hugh: 42; Sermons and Lectures on Rhetoric and Belles-Lettres, 48n7

Blake, William: 3

Bliss, Elam: 12n (title)

Boccalini, Trajano: Ragguagli di Parnasso, 190, 207n26

“Bon-Bon”: 130n7

Boswell, James: 18n20. See also Johnson, Samuel

Boyd, Joseph: 23

British Quarterly Reviews: 40, 41, 46n5, 48n7, 73n14

Broadway Journal, The: Elizabeth Barrett Browning, 74n25, Henry Hirst, 130n13; Thomas Hood 208n30; Walt Whitman, 131n21; John Wilson, 37; Young America, 47n6

Brown, Goold: The institutes of English grammar, 74n25, 82, 127n4, 128n5, 129n5, 131n24, 133n39, 139n61, 139n63, 148

Browning, Elizabeth Barrett: The Drama of Exile and Other Poems, “Lady Geraldine's Courtship,” 74-75n25, 135n44

Bryant, Jacob: A New System of Antient Mythology, 78

Bryant, William Cullen: 12-13n(title), 46n3; “June,” 187-88, 205-6n21; Poems by William Cullen Bryant Collected and Arranged by the Author, 205-6n21; Poe's review “Bryant's Poems,” 133n39, 134n43, 170-71; “Thanatopsis,” 116, 141n85

Bulwer-Lytton, Edward:,12n (title), Critical and Miscellaneous Writings of Sir Edward Lytton, 44, 49n10, “Pompeii” and “Night and Morning,” 56

Buranelli, Vincent: 48n7

Burns, Robert: 48n7

Burtt, Edwin A.: The English Philosophers from Bacon to Mill, 127n3, 213

Butler: Hudibras, 19n23

Byron, Lord: 190; “The Bride of Abydos,” 104-8, 138-39n60, 146, 157-61; “Stanzas for Augusta,” 196-97, 209n32

Candolle, Alphonse de: Origin of Cultivated Plants, 3

Canning, Launcelot: 22, 28, 31n(motto), 34

Cant: of the quarterlies, 26; of generality, 40

Canynge, William: 22, 31n (motto). See also Canning, Launcelot

Carlson, Eric: The Recognition of Edgar Allan Poe, xiin1, 213; “New Introduction” to Selections from the Critical Writings of Edgar Allan Poe, ix, 57, 59, 77, 213-14, 216. See also Prescott, Frederick

Carlyle, Thomas: 48n7

Carter, R.: 80n. See also Pioneer, The

Cervantes, Miguel de: Don Quixote, 58, 210n5; “La Gitanilla,” 142n85; reference in poem by Pope, 96, 98, 134n41, 166

Channing, William Ellery: 47n7

“Chapter of Suggestions, A”: 55-56. See also Dickens, Charles

Chateaubriand: Travels in Greece, 18n20

Chatterton, Thomas: 31-32n (motto); “Thomas Rowley” poems, 22

Chivers, Thomas Holley: 209-10n34, 214

Cibber, Colley: 48n7

Clarke, Thomas C.: 31-32n(motto)

Clemm, Maria: 177, 210n36

Cockney School: 131n23, 134n43, 187

Cockton, Henry: Stanley Thorne, 15n9

Coleridge, Henry Nelson: Introduction to the . . . Greek Classic Poets, 200n4

Coleridge, Samuel Taylor: 3, 6, 7, 10, 13n5, 48n7, 131n23; Biographia Literaria, 8, 18n19, 18-19n21, 200n1, 207n28; “Christabel” 100-101, 136nn49-50; The Complete Poetical Works . . . edited by Ernest Hartley Coleridge, 214; Imagination and Fancy, 191

Collected Works of Edgar Allan Poe: See Mabbott, Thomas Ollive (TOM)

Collected Writings of Edgar Allan Poe: See Pollin, Burton R.

Columbia Spy: 202n9

Comley [[Comly]], John: English Grammar, Made Easy to the Teacher and Pupil &c., 83, 128-29n5, 148

Comly: See Comley

Complete Works of Edgar Allan Poe: See Harrison, James A.

Conde, Duc de: 46n3

Cooper, James Fenimore: 39, 46n3

Cooper, Joab Goldsmith: An Abridgment of Murray's English Grammar, 83, 128n5, 148

Corcyra: 10, 18n20

Cornwall, Barry: 134n43

Coxe, Arthur C.: “March for Strange Music,” 85, 130n14, 152

Cranch, Christopher Pearse: “My Thoughts,” 99-103, 108, 110-12, 136n49, 137n54; Pease/Pearse, 101, 124, 136n51

Cullum, General George W.: 12n(title)

Dalton, J. F.: Peter Snook, 75n25

Dameron, Lasley: ix, 216. See also Prescott, Frederick

Darley, Felix: 31n (motto)

Dawes, Rufus: 47n7

De la Motte: 72n10

De Lonigo: See Leonicenus

death of a beautiful woman: 65, 73-74n20, 176

Demetrius: On Style, 143n95

Democritus: 14n9

“Devil in the Belfry, The”: xiin1

Dial, The: 49n8, 77

Dialism: 43, 48-49n8

Dickens, Charles: Barnaby Rudge, “Poe's discussion in “A Chapter of Suggestions,” 56; Letters of Charles Dickens, 71nn1-2, 214; in “Philosophy of Composition,” 60, 71nn1-2. See also House, Madeline

Dictionary of Names and Titles in Poe's Collected Works: See Pollin, Burton R.

Discoveries in Poe: See Pollin, Burton R.

Disraeli, Isaac: Curiosities of Literature, 73n14, 214; Amenities of Literature, 132n29

“Doings of Gotham”: 202n9

“Domain of Arnheim, The”: 71n3, 131n23, 204n16, 210n35

Dostoevski, Fyodor: ix, x, xii n 1

“Drake's Culprit Fay” (“Drake-Halleck Review”): 37, 44-45n3, 46n4, 72n5, 74n20, 204n18

Dryden, John: All for Love, 7, 14n9

“Duc De L’Omelette, The”: 134n43

Dupin, C. Auguste: 3, 13n6, 52, 72n7, 75n35. See also “Purloined Letter, The” and “Murders in the Rue Morgue, The”

Duyckinck, Evert A.: 47n6

Edgar Allan Poe: A Critical Biography: See Quinn, Arthur Hobson

Edgar Allan Poe: Thirty-Two Stories: See Levine, Stuart, and Susan F. Levine, eds.

Edison, Thomas: x, 59

effect: x, xi, 643-61, 63, 69, 73n10, 94, 176, 185, 198, 205n20

“Eleanora”: 73n20, 210n35

Eliot, Thomas Stearns: 59

Emerson, Ralph Waldo: 4, 49n8, 72n7, 77

Emersonism: 43, 48-49n8

Emmons, Richard “Pop”: “Fredoniad,” 45n3

“Enigma, An”: 210n36

Essays and Reviews: See Thompson, G. R., ed.

Eureka: x, xiii; as a lecture, 145-46; prose poem, 3, 21, 47n6; shared material with other of Poe's works, 1, 13n6, 14n9, 15n10, 78-79, 127n2, 130n17, 132n28, 135n46, 139n73, 140n79, 141n81, 175. See also Levine, Stuart, and Susan F. Levine, eds.

Eveleth, G. W.: 55

Evening Mirror: 74n25, 76n38

Everett, Erastus: A System of English Versification, 133n39

“Exordiuim”: 27, 72n5; text and notes, 37-49

“Fable for Critics, A”: 47n7

“Fall of the House of Usher”: 22, 31n(motto), 73n20, 201n6, 204n16

Fancy: 1, 69, 131n23, 191, 196, 208n28. See also imagination

fantastic, the: 196; in “The Raven,” 68, 69

Feeney, Joseph S. J.: 23

Felton, Cornelius Conway: 119, 120, 121, 130n17, 143n95

Fenelon: “Télémaque,” 153

“Fifty Suggestions”: 74n25

Fisk, Allen: Murray's English Grammar Simplified, 82, 128n5, 148

Flint, Abel: Murray's English Grammar Abridged . . . Designed for the Use of Schools, 83, 128-29n5, 148

Forman, Harry Buxton: ed. The Works of Percy Bysse Shelley in Verse and Prose, 202n7, 217

Forrest, William Mentzel: Biblical Allusions in Poe, 214

Franklin, Benjamin: 131n21

French reviews: 42, 47n7

Freudian critics: 176

“Frog-pond”: 142n95, 203n11

Frogpondian Professors: 119, 121, 143n95

Frost, Robert: 176-77

German writers: 42, 47-48n7

Gill, William F.: The Life of Edgar Allan Poe, 58, 214

Godey's Lady's Book: 78, 136n49, 137n59

Godwin, Parke: A Biography of William Cullen Bryant, 214

Godwin, William: Caleb Williams, 56, 60, 71nn1-2

Goethe, Johann Wolfgang von: 42, 47-48n7

“Gold Bug, The”: 75n35, 145

Goldsmith Oliver: “The Deserted Village,” 93, 133n35

Goths: 8, 15n12

Graham, George R.: 58, 145, 177

Graham's Magazine: “Exordium” in “Review of New Books” column, January 1842, 37, 72n5; “Exordium,” text, 38; “Fifty suggestions,” May and June 1845 [[1849]], 74n25; Graham's failure to purchase “The Poetic Principle,” 177; letter from Poe to George Graham, March 1850; “Marginalia” on rhyme, March 1846, 132n28; “Marginalia,” reuse of material from, November 1846, 77; “Notes Upon English Verse,” 145; poem by Charles Allan, November 1844, 130n13; Poe's opinions of the magazine expressed in prospectuses for “The Stylus,” 29, 32, 34; Poe's praise for Horne's Orion, 135n44; Poe's repeated use of ideas, 15n9; Poe's review of Critical and Miscellaneous Essays of Sir Edward Lytton Bulwer, November 1841, 49n10; Poe's review of Dicken's Barnaby Rudge, February 1842, 71n1; Poe's review of Macaulay's Critical and Miscellaneous Essays, June 1841, 46n5; Poe's review of Pue's Grammar of the English Language, July 1841, 128n4; publication of “The Philosophy of Composition,” April 1846, 59, 76n36

Gravina, Abbaté (Gravini, Giovanni Vicenzo): Della Ragion Poetica, 184, 204n14

Greek (expressions in): in Greek alphabet, 102, 107-8, 136nn53-54, 153; in Roman alphabet, 6n

Greenleaf, Jeremiah: Grammar Simplified, 82, 128n5, 148

Greenwood, Arthur: ed., annotator, The Rationale of Verse, xiii, 78; variants noted, 122, 124, 125; 127n4, 128n5, 129nn5-6, 130n17, 131n20, 131nn23-25, 132nn28-29, 133n31, 133n39, 134-35n43, 135n44, 136n47 137nn53-54, 137n57, 137n59, 138n60, 139n63, 140n80, 141n85, 142n88, 143nn95-96, 216

Griswold, Rufus: xiin8, 52, 201n6, 205n20; ed., Poets and Poetry of America, 130n14, 136n49, 140n80, 165; ed., Poets and Poetry of England, 210n36; ed., The Works of The Late Edgar Allan Poe, 4; 177, 217; for establishing text of “The Rationale of Verse,” 80, 121-26, 130n10, 138-39n60

Halleck, Fitz-Greene: Alnwick Castle with other Poems, 44n3, 204n18. See also “Drake's Culprit Fay”

“Hans Pfaal — A Tale”: 140n81

Hardenberg, Friedrich von (Novalis): 42, 47-48n7

harmony: 83, 84, 86, 88, 148-50, 157, 158, 162, 165, 170, 183, 198. See also melody; music

Harper's Magazine: 12n(title)

Harrison, James A.: ed., Complete Works of Edgar Allan Poe, xiii, 47n7, 49n10, 52, 136n49, 207n25, 216

Hawthorne, Nathanial [[Nathaniel]]: 77; The Blithedale Romance, 74n20; Twice-Told Tales, 73n10, 76n36, 200nn1-2

Hédelin, Francois [[François]], abbé d’Aubignac: 200n4

heresy of the didactic: 1, 182, 203n11

Herodotus: History, 15n12

Hill, George: The Ruins of Athens and Other Poems, 207n25

Hirst, Henry B.: The Coming of the Mammoth, 130n13, 137n57

Historical Society of Pennsylvania: 23

Hoffman, Charles Fenno: 97, 134n43, 206n25

Hoffman, E. T. A.: ix

Holmes, Oliver W.: “Last Leaf,” 162-65, 167

Holt, Palmer C.: “Poe and H. N. Coleridge's Greek Classic Poets: ‘Pinakida, ’ ‘Politian, ’ and ‘Morella’ Sources,” 214

Home Journal: 177

Homer: Iliad, 42, 86, 114, 179, 200n4

Hood, Thomas: Selected Poems of Thomas Hood, John Clubbe, ed., 214; “Bridge of Sighs,” 193-96, 208-9n30; “Fair Ines,” 191-92, 208n29; “The Haunted House,” 193, 208n30

Hood's Magazine: 208n30

Horace: Carmina, 113, 115, 116, 117, 139-40n74, 142n88; Ars Poetica, 132n28, 139-40n74, 142n86

Horne, Richard Henry: Orion and preface to The Poems of Geoffrey Chaucer Modernized, 98, 135n44

House, Madeline, Graham Storey, Kathleen Tillotson: eds., The Letters of Charles Dickens, 71n1, 214

“How to Write a Blackwood Article / A Predicament”: 47n7, 58, 77, 134n43

Hudson, Norman Henry: Lectures on Shakespeare, 141n81

“Hudsonizing”: 141n81

Humboldt, Alexander von: 13n6

Hunt, Leigh: “The Principle of Variety in Uniformity” in Imagination and Fancy, 88, 131n23; 135n44

imagination: 1, 7, 24, 88, 131n23, 191, 193, 204n16, 208n28. See also Fancy, Coleridge, Hunt

influence abroad: 51

Ingersoll, Charles M.: Conversations on English Grammar, 82, 128n5, 148

Ingram, Susan V. C.: 136n51

inspiration: x, 3, 13n6, 57, 59, 175

iron pen: 28, 31n(motto)

Irving, Washington: A History of New York, 15n12, 46n3

“Island of the Fay, The”: 15n10

“Israfel”: 201n6

Jackson, David K.: 72n5, 74n25, 217. See also Thomas, Dwight.

Johnson, Samuel: Dictionary, 10, 18n20; 19n22, 42, 48n7, 136n51

Journal of Julius Rodman, The: 2

Kaimes: See Kames, Henry Home, Lord

Kames, Henry Home, Lord, (Kaimes in the text): 39, 42, 48n7

Kant, Immanuel: “Introduction” in The Critique of Judgment, 203n13

Kearns, Christopher: “Rehearsing Dupin: Poe's Duplicitous Confrontations with Coleridge,” 3n1, 214

Kennedy, Gerald, and Liliane Weissberg: eds., Romancing the Shadow / Poe and Race, 143n100, 214

Kirkham, Samuel (Kirkland in the text): English Grammar in Familiar Lectures, 83, 128n5, 148

Kirkland: See Kirkham, Samuel

Knickerbocker, The: 15n12, 25, 27, See also Irving, Washington

Koran: 201n6

Lagerkvirst, Par: 59

Lake School: 6

Lamartine, Alphonse de: 179, 201-2n5

“Landor's Cottage”: 131n23

“Landscape Garden, The”: 204n16. See also poetic sentiment

Legrand: 75. See also “Gold Bug, The”

Leibnitz: 18n19, 86; correction in spelling, 122, 130n17

Length of a poem: x, 3, 13nn3-4, 57, 62-63, 721-10, 178, 200nm-2

Leonicenus, Omnibonus: De octo partibus, 83 129n5, 149

“Letter to B———.”: x, 1-19, 48n7, 51, 71n3, 75n36, 78, 127n3, 200n1, 200n5, 203n11

Letters of Edgar Allan Poe, The: See Ostrom, John Ward

Levine, Stuart, Edgar Poe: Seer and Craftsman, xiin5, 3, 204n16, 210n35, 214; “Masonry, Impunity, and Revolution,” 211n36, 214; “Poe and American Society,” 49n 10, 214

Levine, Stuart, and Susan F. Levine: editors, Eureka, xiii, 3, 13n6, 14n9, 47n6, 127n2, 130n17, 132n28, 135n16, 139n73, 140n79, 141n81, 216; editors, The Short Fiction of Edgar Allan Poe/An Annotated Edition, xiii, 3, 13n6, 14n9, 31n(motto), 48n7, 71n3, 72n5, 75n35, 130n17, 131n23, 132n28, 134n43, 137n57, 140n79, 140-41n81, 143n95, 201n6, 202n9, 204n16, 210n35, 216; editors, Thirty-Two Stories, xiii, 3, 13n6, 14n9, 31n(motto), 71n3, 72n5, 75n35, 130n17, 131n23, 134n43, 140n79, 140-41n81, 143n95, 201n6, 202n9, 204n16, 210n35, 217; “History, Myth, Fable, and Satire: Poe's Use of Jacob Bryant,” 78, 214; “‘How to’ Satire: Cervantes, Marryat, Poe,” 58, 134n43, 214

Lewis, Sarah Anna (Estelle Anna Lewis): 210n36

Liberal, The: 202n7

“Ligeia”: 14n9, 73n20

Lilly Library at Indiana University: 34

Lily, William: Brevissima institutio, 83, 129n5, 148

“Literary America”: 33

“Literary Life of Thingum Bob, The”: 45n3, 46n4

literary nationalism: 37-38, 39, 45n3, 47n6

“Literati of New York, The”: 47n7, 136n49, 202n9, 206n25

Longfellow, Henry Wadsworth: Poe's review of “Longfellow's Ballads,” 72-73n 10, 73n13, 76n36, 203n12, 204n16, 204nn17-18; “The Spanish Student,” 116, 142n85; translation of “Nattvardsbarnen,” 119-21, 143nn95-96, 150, 167-70; “Waif” (“The Day is Done”), 185-87, 205n19

“Loss of Breath”: 47n7, 131n23

love: poetical theme, 198-99

Lowell, James Russell: ix, 37; letter from Poe to, 202n9; The Pioneer 21, 78, 80, 145-46

Lubell, Albert J.: “Poe and A. W. Schlegel,” 1, 18n18, 48n7, 72n10, 73n13, 215

Mabbott, Thomas Ollive (TOM): 12n(title), 13n6, 15n9, 15nn12-13, 16n14, 18n18, 18n20, 31, 52, 58, 59, 72n5, 76n38, 128n5, 128n10, 130nn13-14, 130n18, 131n21, 132n28, 132n30, 133n35, 134n43, 135n44, 136n51, 137n57, 142n88, 145, 177, 200n5, 201n6, 201-2n7, 202n9, 204n14, 206n24, 207n25, 209n34, 210n36, 215

— editor, Collected Works of Edgar Allan Poe: xiii: Vol. 1, Complete Poems, 11, 73n14, 215; Vol. 2, Tales and Sketches, 1831-42, 72n5, 75n35, 130n17, 131n23, 132n28, 134n43, 137n57, 201n6, 202n9, 204n16, 210n35, 216; Vol. 3, Tales and Sketches, 1842-1849, 71n3, 72n5, 75n35, 131n23, 140n79, 140n81, 141n81, 204n16, 216

— editor, The Raven and Other Poems (1845) [[facsimile edition]]: 52, 75n31, 135n45, 216

— and Frank Lester Pleadwell: The Life and Works of Edward Coote Pinkney: A Memoir and Complete Text of His Poems and Literary Prose, 206n24, 215

— “Preface”: 51-53, 55, 176, 205n18

Macaulay, Thomas Babington: 41, 46n5, 48n7

Macausland, Georgiana: 206n24

MacLeish, Archibald: “Ars Poetics,” 175

MacPherson, James (Ossian): “Temora,” 9, 15-16n14

“Magazinist”: x, xi

Malamud, Bernard: 177

Mallarmé, Stéphane: 59

“Man of the Crowd, The”: 130n17, 202n9

“Marginalia”: 2, 47n7, 48n7, 58, 77, 127n3, 131n23, 132n28, 136n49, 136-37nn53-54, 142n95, 206-7n25

Marryat, Frederick: “How to Write a Fashionable Novel,” 58, 134n43

Mason, Monck: 140n81

“Masque of the Red Death, The”: 72n5

Mathews, Cornelius: 39, 41, 42-43, 47n7

Matthiessen, F. O.: ed., The Oxford Book of American Verse, 205

Maturin, Charles Robert: Melmoth the Wanderer, 7, 13-14n8

Mayakovsky, Vladimir: 59

McElderry, Jr., B. R.: “Southey and Wordsworth's ‘The Idiot Boy’, 17n14

McGill, Meredith: “Poe, Literary Nationalism and Authorial Identity,” 37n, 45n3, 215

Melancholy: 64, 65-66, 69, 73n14, 188. See also death of a beautiful woman

“Mellonta Tauta”: 13n6, 14n9, 140n79, 141n81, 143n95, 143n100

melody: 83, 86, 88, 119, 148, 149, 162, 170, 199. See also harmony; music

Melville, Herman: 45n3, 77, 133n35, 143n100

Mesmerism: 140-41n81

Middleton, Thomas: “The Spanish Gypsy,” 142n85

Miller, Alexander: A Concise Grammar of the English Language, 82, 128n5, 148

Miller, Ham: Abridgment of Murray, 82, 128n5, 148

Miller, Perry: ix, xiin2

Milton, John: 13nn3-4, 153, 166; Paradise Lost 6, 62, 179, 200n3; Paradise Regained, 6; Comus, 6

Mirabeau, Comte Honoré de: 43, 48n7

Moldenhauer, Joseph J.: comp., A Descriptive Catalogue of the Edgar Allan Poe Manuscripts in the Humanities Research Library, the University of Texas at Austin, 215

Montgomery, James: “The Form of Poetry” in Lectures on Poetry and General Literature, 132n29, 142n95

Moore, Thomas: Poe's review of Alciphron, 76n36; “Irish Melodies,” 185, 190-91, 204n16, 207n28; The Poetical Works of Thomas Moore Collected by Himself, 207n28, 209n32

“Morella”: 47n7, 73n20

Mortagu, Basil: ed., De Argumentis Scientiarum, 127n3. See also Bacon, Francis

Moss, Sydney: Poe's Literary Battles: The Critic in the Context of His Literary Milieu, 46n4, 215

Motherwell, William: “The Song of the Cavalier,” 199, 210n36

Munk, Edward: The metres of Greeks and Romans, 130n17

“Murders in the Rue Morgue, The”: 15n10, 75n35

Murray, Lindley: English Grammar, 83, 128-29n5, 148

music: discord in, 63, 165-66; in Latin poetry, 113, 118; of Thomas Moore, 204n16; musical line, 100; musical perceptions, 160; pleasure in equality of sounds, 87-88; poetic sentiment in, 184-85; and poetry, 11; rhythm/time in, 153; in . . . soul, 19n22; Usher's guitar music 204n16. See also harmony; melody

national literature: See literary nationalism

New Criticism: ix, xiin2, 38, 59

Nietzsche, Friedrich Wilhelm: 72n7

North American Review, The: 25, 27, 143n95, 187, 190, 205n20, 207n25

“Notes Upon English Verse”: ix, 21, 78, 127n4, 138n60, 142n93, 145-74

Novalis (Friedrich von Hardenberg): 42, 47n7, 48n7

Nyctanthes: 18n19

Omans, Glen A.: “‘Intellect, Taste and the Moral Sense’: Poe's Debt to Immanuel Kant,” 215

O’Neill, James: “A Closer Source for the Goths in Poe's [[‘]]Letter to B——[[,]]” 15n12, 215

“one-ness”: 78, 131n23

Orphicism: 43, 48-49n8

Ossian: See MacPherson, James

Ostrom, John Ward: ed., The Letters of Edgar Allan Poe, 22, 27, 146, 216

Paine, Thomas: The Age of Reason, 200n5

Pallas: 68, 70

Pascal, Blaise: Pensées et Opuscules, M. Leon Brunschvicg, ed., 215

Paulding, James K.: 39, 46n3

Peeples, Scott: “The Mere Man of Letters Must Ever Be a Cypher: Poe and N. P. Willis,” xiin7, 215

“Penn, The”: 21-27, 28. See also “Stylus, The”

Person, Leland S., Jr.: “Poe's Composition of Philosophy: Reading and Writing ‘The Raven,” 59n2, 215

“Philosophy of Composition, The”: x, 38, 45n3, 48n7, 51, 55-76, 78, 140n80, 175, 200n1, 200n3, 200n5

“Philosophy of Furniture, The”: 75n27, 204n16

“Pinakidia”: 2; Hebrew rhyme, 132n29; Iliad, 200n4; “Nubes” of Aristophanes, 132n28; Schlegels, 48n7; Sir Philip Sidney, 142n95; Silius Italicus, 129n10

Pindaric odes: 83, 108, 129n6, 149, 161

Pinkney, Edward Coote: 178; “A Health,” 189-90, 206n24, 206n25

Pioneer, The: “Notes on English Verse,” 78, 145-74; “The Rationale of Verse,” 21, 80n. See also Lowell, James Russell

Plato: 13, 210

Pleadwell, Frank Lester: 206n24, 215. See also Mabbott, Thomas Ollive

pleasure: 1, 3, 4, 7, 10, 11, 18-19n21, 24, 63, 64, 66, 87, 184, 185, 189, 203n11. See also beauty, truth, poetic sentiment, melancholy

Pliny (Gaius Plinius Secundus): Natural History, 18n18

Poems by Edgar A. Poe, Second Edition, 1831: 4, 73n14, 75n31; variants of “Letter to B——,” 11-12

Poems of Edgar Allan Poe, The: See Stovall, Floyd, ed.

“Poetic Principle, The”: 78, 142n86; art for art's sake, x, xi, 175; as a lecture, 145-46, 175, 177, 202n8; length of poem, 3; love poem 73n10; Milton, 13nn3-4; prospectuses, 21; text and notes, 175-211

poetic sentiment: 184-85, 204n16, 204n18

poetry: See art for art's sake; beauty; death of a beautiful woman; harmony; heresy of the didactic; imagination; inspiration; length of a poem; melancholy; melody; truth

“Poetry of America, The” (a talk by Poe): 202n9

Politian: 3

Pollin, Burton R.:

Dictionary of Names and Titles in Poe's Collected Works: 15n9, 15n12, 137n57, 204n14, 217

Discoveries in Poe: 21-23, 28, 31n(motto), 32n5, 32n7, 34, 217

— editor: Collected Writings of Edgar Allan Poe, ix, xiii, 216: Vol. 1, The Imaginary Voyages: The Narrative of Arthur Gordon Pym/ The Unparalled Adventures of One Hans Pfaall/The Journal of Julius Rodman, 141n8; Vol. 2., The Brevities: Pinakidia/Marginalia/Fifty Suggestions, 18n19, 46n5, 47n7, 48n7, 56, 127n3, 130n10, 131n23, 132nn28-29, 136n49, 137nn53-54, 137n57, 140n80, 140-41n81, 142n95, 200n4, 201n5, 207n25; Vols. 3 (text) and 4 (annotations), Writings in The Broadway Journal: Nonfictional Prose, 47n6

Poe Creator of Words: 127n2, 133n30, 217

— “Politics and History in Poe's ‘Melonta Tauta’: Two Allusions Explained”: 201n6, 217

Word Index to Poe's Fiction: 60, 178, 217

Pollok, Robert: The Course of Time, 179, 201n5

Pollock: See Pollok, Robert

Pope, Alexander: “Dunciad,” 42, 48n7, 95-96, 98-99, 100, 133n39, 133-34n41, 152-53, 162, 166, 167

“Power of Words, The”: 73n20, 141n81

“Preface” to the 1845 poems: text and notes. See Mabbott, Thomas Ollive

Prescott, Frederick Clarke: ed., Selections from the Critical Writings of Edgar Allan Poe, ix, xii, 13n6, 57, 59, 73n 10, 73n14, 74-75n25, 77, 131n23, 139n63, 216. See also Dameron, Lasley; Carlson, Eric

prospectuses for “The Penn” and “The Stylus”: 21-36

Puckle, James: The Club, 207n26

Pue, Hugh A.: 83, 128n4, 129n5, 148

“Puffing”: xi

“Purloined Letter, The”: 3, 31n(motto), 72n5, 127n3

Quarles, Francis: Emblems, 76n38

Quarterly Reviews: 179-80. See also British Quarterly Reviews

Quinn, Arthur Hobson: Edgar Allan Poe: A Critical Biography, 23, 177, 201n6, 205n20, 210n36, 217

Quinn, Patrick: ed., Poetry and Tales, 216

Rabelais, Francois [[François]]: Gargantua and Pantagruel, 130n17, 133-34n41, 166; reference in poem by Pope, 96, 98

Race, Poe and: 143n100

Ranke, Leopold von: History of the Popes of Rome, 41, 46n5. See also Macaulay, Thomas

“Rationale of Verse, The”: ix, 14n9, 21, 48n7, 71n5, 74n25, 145, 202n9; text and notes, 77-143

Rationale of Verse, The”: See Greenwood, J. Arthur, ed.

Raven and Other Poems, The: See Mabbott, Thomas Ollive, ed.

“Raven, The”: x, 55-76, 94

refrain: 61-74, 87, 94

“Review of New Books”: See “Exordium”

Revue des deux mondes: 47n7

Robertson, John W.: Bibliography of the Writings of Edgar Allan Poe, 31, 217

Rosenheim, Shawn, and Stephan Rachman: eds., The American Face of Edgar Allan Poe, 215. See also McGill, Meredith

Roth, Martin: “Poe's Divine Spondee,” 78, 217

Sartain, John: Sartain's Union Magazine, text for “The Poetic Principle,” 177-99, 201-2n7, 202nn8-9, 205n19, 205-6n21, 206n24, 207n28, 208-9n30, 209n32

Saturday Evening Post: 71n1, 210n36

Saturday Museum: 28

Schelling, Friedrich Wilhelm Joseph von: 42, 47-48n7

Schiller, Johann Christoph Friedrich von: 47-48n7

Schlegel, August Wilhelm von: Lectures on Dramatic Art and Literature, 1, 18n18, 42, 47-48n7, 72n10, 73nn13-14

Schlegel, Friedrich von: 42, 47-48n7

Scott, Sir Walter: 48n7, 211n36

Seaver, James: 139n60

Selections from The Critical Writings: See Prescott, Frederick

Shakespeare, William: 5, 45n3, 133n32, 134n43, 140-41n81, 208n30; Dr. Johnson and, 10, 18n20; “fine frenzy,” 61, 71n5, 114, 140n80; “no music in himself,” 11, 19n22; “There shall be no more cakes and ale,” 41, 46n6

Shaw, George Bernard: ix

Shelley, Percy Bysshe: 4; “Lines to an Indian Air” (“The Indian Serenade”), 176, 180-81, 201n7; “To ——,” 203n14; 217

Shelton, Elmira Royster: letter to Maria Clemm, 177

Shoberl, Frederic: 18n20

Short Fiction of Edgar Allan Poe: An Annotated Edition, The: See Levine, Stuart, and Susan F. Levine, eds.

Sidney, Sir Philip: 119, 142n95

Silius Italicus, Titus Catius: Punica, 84, 119, 129-30n10, 150-51, 167-68

“Sleeper, The” (“Irene”): 55

Smith, Elizabeth Oakes: 77

Snell, George: “First of the New Critics,” ix, xiin2, 217

Snowden, William: Ladies’ Companion, 137n57. See also Hirst

“Some Passages in the Life of a Lion”: 134n43

“Sonnet to Science”: x

Sophocles: 10, 18n18

Southern Literary Messenger: “Bryant's Poems,” 133n39, 205n21; on “Clouds” of Aristophanes, 132n28; on composition by plan, 58; Cranch, accents in poem by, 139n72; incorrect variants, 130n10, 137n57; “Letter to B——,” text and variants in, 4, 11, 12; Peter Snook, from review of, 75n25; Poe's comments on SLM in the prospectuses, 23, 24, 25, 26, 27, 29, 32, 34; on publication of “The Rationale of Verse,” 80; quote from “Drake's Culprit Fay,” 44n3; quote from Siluis Italicus, 129n10; variant for poem by Byron 139n60; variants for “The Rationale of Verse,” 121-26

Southey, Robert: 6, 13n5; “Thalaba the Destroyer,” 1n8; Wordsworth's “The Idiot Boy,” 17n14

“Spectacles, The”: 17n16, 72n5

Sprague, Charles: 162

Stedman, Edmund Clarence, and George Woodberry: The Works of Edgar Allan Poe, 11, 12, 217

Sterne, Laurence: Tristram Shandy, 15n12

Stovall, Floyd: ed, The Poems of Edgar Allan Poe, 75n31, 13n45, 216

Street, Alfred: “The Lost Hunter,” 79, 114-15, 140n80, 171

“Stylus, The”: 21-22, 27-37. See also “Penn, The”

Tacitus, Cornelius: Germania, 15n12

“Tale of Jerusalem, A”: 132n28, 137n57

“Tamerlane”: 11

Tate, Allen: ix

Taylor, Bayard: 177

Tegner, Esaias: “Nattvardsbarnen” (translated by Longfellow as “Children of the Lord's Supper”), 120, 143n96, 150

“Tell-Tale Heart, The”: xiin1

Tennyson, Lord Alfred: “The Lady of Shalott,” 22; “Locksley Hall,” 74n25; “Lilian,” 132-33n30; “The Princess,” 197-98, 209n33

Thirty-Two Stories: See Levine, Stuart, and Susan F. Levine, eds.

Thomas, Dwight, and David K. Jackson: The Poe Log, 72n5, 74n25, 217

Thompson, G. R.: ed., Essays and Reviews, 16n1 4, 48n7, 49n 10, 128n5, 129n5, 129n10, 130n13, 203n13, 216

Thoms, Peter: “Poe's Dupin and the Power of Detection,” 72n7, 217

Thomson, Charles W.: 23

Thornburg, Thomas: “Poe's ‘Letter to B——’: A Query,” 15n12, 217

Tieck, Ludwig: 47n7

Tomc, Sandra M.: “Poe and His Circle,” xiin8, 218

Transcendentalists/transcendentalism: 48-49n8, 57, 70, 72n7, 76n36, 77, 136n49, 200n3, 203n11

truth: in deep places, 7, 14n9, 127n3; Diana of Truth, 210n34; and harmony 198-99; nature of, 81; poet as truth-giver, 58-59; poetry and, x, 1, 3, 4, 10, 13n6, 18n21, 63, 78, 175, 182-83, 185, 203n11, 204n18, 210n34; “writ with . . . iron pen,” 28. See also beauty; pleasure

Twain, Mark: Huckleberry Finn, 74n20, 211n36

“Ulalume”: 136n51

unity: 1, 62, 72-73n10, 179, 200n3

Universal Magazine: 129n5

University of Texas-Austin: 22

University of Virginia: 34

Ursa Major: See> Johnson, Samuel

Valéry, Paul Ambroise: 59

Variety in Uniformity: 88, 131n23. See also Hunt, Leigh

Venus: 198-99, 209-10n34

Vines, Lois: Poe Abroad: Influence, Reputation, Affinities, 218

Virgil: The Aeneid, 16n14, 130n18, 132n28

Voltaire (Francois [[François]] Marie Arouet): 48n7

Weiss, Susan Archer Talley: 58

Weissberg, Liliane: 143n100, 214. See also Kennedy, Gerald

Welby, Amelia: Poems by Amelia, 103, 137n57, 162

White, T. W.: 12

Whitman, Walt: 131n21

Williams, William Carlos: ix

Willis, N. P.: xi, xiin4, xiinn7-8, 175, 177; Melanie and Other Poems and Poems of Early and Later Years, 97-98, 134-35n43; “Unseen Spirits,” 181-82, 202n9, 202-3n10, 203n11

Wilson, Edmund: ix

Wilson, James Grant: Bryant and His Friends, 200n5

Wilson, James Southall: “Poe's Philosophy of Composition,” 72-73n 10, 218

Wilson, John (“Christopher North”): 37

Winkelman, Johann Joachim: 42, 47n7

Woodberry, George: See Stedman, Edmund Clarence

Wordsworth, William: and Coleridge, 207-8n28; “Essay Supplementary to the Preface,” 218; on genius, 8, 15n13; “The Idiot Boy,” 9, 16-17n14; “Mutability” and “Ecclesiastical Sonnets,” 133n35; Ossian, 15-16n14; “The Pet Lamb: A Pastoral,” 9, 17n14; Poe's criticism of and dependence on, 1, Poe's misquotation, 2, 10, 17n17; Poe's use of in “Letter to B———,” 75n36; poetry a study, 7, 14n9; on poetry/ science, 19n21; “Preface” to Lyrical Ballads, Aristotle, 4, 6-7, 13n6; “The Wagoner,” 10, 17n18; Wordsworth's version of Chaucer in Horne's edition, 135n44

Works of Edgar Allan Poe, The: See Stedman, Edmund Clarence, and George Woodberry, eds.

“X-ing a Paragrab”: 143n95

Yanella, Donald: “Writing in the ‘Other Way’: Melville, The Duyckinck Crowd, and Literature for the Masses, ” 47n7, 218

“Young America”: 37, 45n3, 47n6

Zoilus and Apollo: 190, 207n26

 


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[S:0 - SSLCT, 2009] - Edgar Allan Poe Society of Baltimore - Editions - EAP: Critical Theory (S. and S. Levine) (Index)