Sarah Helen Whitman (1803-1878), poet and critic, is best known for her
brief engagement to Edgar Allan Poe in 1848, and for her role as Poe’s
posthumous defender in her 1860 book, Edgar Poe and His Critics. She is
seldom treated as more than an incidental person in Poe biography, and
no books of her own poetry were reprinted after 1916. As critic, she was
a ground-breaking American defender of Poe, Shelley, Byron, Goethe,
Alcott, and Emerson, yet none of her literary essays other than her
defense of Poe have ever appeared in book form. She and her friend
Margaret Fuller are credited with being the first American women
literary critics.This volume presents Whitman’s literary essays with
more than 500 annotations and notes, tracing her literary sources and
allusions, and revealing the remarkable breadth of her readings in
literature, philosophy, history, and science. Brett Rutherford’s
biographical essay is rich in revelations about Whitman’s time and
place, her family history, and her muted career as poet, essayist, and
den mother to artists and writers. Exploding the standard view of her as
the secluded “literary widow,” we can now perceive her as a literary
radical pushing against a conservative milieu; a suffragist and
abolitionist who dabbled in séances; and a devotee of the New England
Transcendentalists and the German Idealists who inspired them.The
complete text of Edgar Poe and His Critics presented here, includes the
opposing texts by Rufus Griswold, whose libels provoked her landmark
defense of Poe’s writing and character. This annotated version
identifies all the contemporary press reviews and books Whitman read and
critiqued, making it indispensible for students of Edgar Allan Poe.The
selected poems in this volume include the hyper-Romantic traversal of
rival mythologies in “Hours of Life,” her most ambitious work; her poems
to and about Edgar Allan Poe; sensitive and atmospheric nature
portrayals; a defense of the then-reviled art of the drama; a love poem
from Proserpine to Pluto; an occasional poem about Rhode Island penned
in the after-shadow of the Dorr Rebellion; and translations from French
and German poets, most notably the most famous of all European ghost
ballads, Bürger’s “Leonora.” Whitman’s allusions and unattributed
quotations from other poets are all annotated, making this book a must
for scholars and students.
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