Close Es

The Works of Edgar Allan Poe; Newly Collected and Edited... by Edmund Clarence Stedman and George Edward Woodberry

TitleThe Works of Edgar Allan Poe; Newly Collected and Edited... by Edmund Clarence Stedman and George Edward Woodberry

AuthorEdgar Allan Poe

Editing placeLondon

EditorialLawrence & Bullen

Year1895

IllustratorAlbert Edward Sterner

Edition typeAnthology (English)

Translator

LanguageEnglish

LibraryBUCLM 821-8 POE wor (1-10)

Volumes10

Number of pages343

Size (in cms)19,5 x 12,5

Works included
[Catholic] Hymn
A Chapter on Autography
A Descent into the Maelström
A Dream (Poem)
A Dream within a Dream
A Predicament
A Sucession of Sundays (Three Sundays in a Week)
A Tale of Jerusalem
A Tale of the Ragged Mountains
A Valentine
Al Aaraaf
Alone
Amelia Bell Welby
An enigma
Anastatic Printing
Ann S. Stephens
Anna Cora Mowatt
Annabel Lee
Anne C. Lynch
Bayard Taylor
Berenice
Bon-Bon
Bridal Ballad ('Song of the Newly-Wedded')
Captain Frederick Marryatt [Francis Marryatt; review of Joseph Rushbrook, or the Poacher]
Caroline M. Kirkland
Catherine M. Sedgwick
Charles Anthon
Charles Dickens [Review of Barnaby Rudge]
Charles F. Briggs
Charles Fenno Hoffman
Christopher Pearse Cranch
Cornelius Mathews
Cryptography
Diddling Considered as One of the Exact Sciences
Dream Land
Dreams
Edwin Percy Whipple [E. P. Whipple and Other Critics]
Eldorado
Eleonora
Elizabeth Barrett Barrett
Elizabeth Bogart
Elizabeth Frieze Ellet
Elizabeth Oakes Smith
Emma C. Embury
Epes Sargent
Epimanes (Four Beasts in One)
Eulalie
Eureka
Evening Star
Evert Augustus Duyckinck
Fairy-land
Fitz-Greene Halleck
For Annie
Frances Sargent Osgood
Freeman Hunt
George B. Cheever
George Bush
George H. Colton
George Pope Morris
Griswold´s American Poetry [Review of The Poets and Poetry of America]
Gulian C. Verplanck
Henry Cockton
Henry Beck Hirst
Henry Cary
Henry Wadsworth Longfellow [Longfellow´s Ballads]
Henry Wadsworth Longfellow [Mr. Longfellow and Other Plagiarists / A Reply to "Outis" / A Discussion with "Outis"]
Henry Wadsworth Longfellow [Mr. Longfellow, Mr. Willis and the American Drama]
Hop-Frog
Israfel
James Aldrich
James Fenimore Cooper [Review of Wyandotte, or the Hutted Knoll]
James Lawson
James Russell Lowell [Review of A Fable for Critics]
Joel Tyler Headley
John Gardiner Calkins Brainard
John W. Francis
King Pest. A Tale Containing an Allegory
Landor´s Cottage
Laughton Osborn
Lenore
Lewis Gaylord Clark
Life in Death (The Oval Portrait)
Ligeia
Lionizing
Lydia M. Child
Maelzel's Chess Player
Margaret Miller Davidson & Lucretia Maria Davidson
Marginalia
Mary E. Hewitt
Mary Gove
Mellonta Tauta
Mesmeric Revelation
Metzengerstein
Morella
MS. Found in a Bottle
Mystification
Nathaniel Hawthorne [Tale-Writing — Nathaniel Hawthorne]
Nathaniel Parker Willis
Never Bet the Devil your Head (a Tale with a Moral)
Piero Maroncelli
Politian (Scenes from). An Unpublished Drama
Prosper M. Wetmore
Ralph Hoyt
Review of Lambert A. Wilmer´s The Quacks of Helicon
Review of Stephens´s Incidents of Travels in Egypt, Arabia Petraea and the Holy Land
Review of Washington Irving´s Astoria
Richard Adams Locke
Richard Hengst Horne
Robert Montgomery Bird
Robert Walsh [Review of Didactics]
Romance
Rufus Dawes
Sarah [Stella; Estelle] Anna Lewis
Sarah Margaret Fuller
Seba Smith
Shadow - A Parable
Silence - A Fable
Some Secrets of the Magazine Prison-House
Some Words with a Mummy
Song (I Saw Thee on thy Bridal Day)
Sonnet – Silence
Sonnet – To Science
Spirits of the Dead
Stanzas
Tamerlane
The Angel of the Odd
The Assignation
The Balloon Hoax
The Bells
The Black Cat
The Business Man
The Cask of Amontillado
The City in the Sea
The Coliseum
The Colloquy of Monos and Una
The Conqueror Worm
The Conversation of Eiros and Charmion
The Devil in the Belfry
The Domain of Arnheim
The Duc de L’Omelette
The Elk
The Facts in the Case of M. Valdemar
The Fall of the House of Usher
The Gold-Bug
The Haunted Palace
The Imp of the Perverse
The Island of the Fay
The Journal of Julius Rodman
The Lake -- To-
The Literary Life of Thingum Bob, Esq (Late Editor of the "Goosethingumfoodle")
The Man of the Crowd
The Man that was Used Up
The Masque of the Red Death
The Murders in the Rue Morgue
The Mystery of Marie Roget. A Sequel to ‘The Murders in the Rue Morgue’
The Narrative of Arthur Gordon Pym
The Oblong Box
The Philosophy of Composition
The Philosophy of Furniture
The Pit and the Pendulum
The Poetic Principle
The Power of Words
The Premature Burial
The Psyche Zenobia (How to Write a Blackwood Article)
The Purloined Letter
The Rationale of Verse
The Raven
The Sleeper
The Spectacles
The Sphinx
The System of Doctor Tarr and Professor Fether
The Tell-Tale Heart
The Thousand-and-Second Tale of Scheherazade
The Unparalleled Adventure of one Hans Pfaall
The Valley of Unrest
Thomas Babington Macaulay
Thomas Dunn Brown [English]
Thomas Moore [Review of Alciphron: A Poem (Fancy and Imagination)]
Thou Art the Man
To Elmira
To F... S S. O... D (To Frances S. Osgood)
To F[rances]
To Helen
To Helen Whitman
To M – (“I heed not”)
To M. L. S. (To Mary Louise Shew)
To Marie Louise
To My Mother (Sonnet – To My Mother)
To One in Paradise
To the River [Po]
To Zante (Sonnet — To Zante)
Ulalume
Von Kempelen and his Discovery
Why the Little Frenchman Wears his Hand in a Sling
William Cullen Bryant
William Ellery Channing (the younger)
William Gilmore Simms
William Kirkland
William M. Gillespie
William Ross Wallace
William Wilberforce Lord
William Wilson
X-ing a Paragrab

Works illustrated
A Predicament
Annabel Lee
Dream Land
Eleonora
King Pest. A Tale Containing an Allegory
Ligeia
Others
Poe's Cottage
Portrait
The Domain of Arnheim
The Fall of the House of Usher
The Gold-Bug
The Man of the Crowd
The Masque of the Red Death
The Mystery of Marie Roget. A Sequel to ‘The Murders in the Rue Morgue’
The Narrative of Arthur Gordon Pym
The Raven
The System of Doctor Tarr and Professor Fether
Ulalume
William Wilson

Bibliographic referencesDROST 129, 158-159, 172-173, 230-233, 247-248; GONZÁLEZ MORENO 142; POLLIN 120 (453)

DescriptionSame edition previously appeared in Chicago: Stone & Kimball, 1894-95. It contains: Vol. I: “Memoir” by George Edward Woodberry, “Introduction to the tales” by Edmund Clarence Stedmany and Tales of Death and the Ancient World; Vol. II-IV: Tales of the Grotesque and the Arabesque; Vol. V: Tales of Adventure and Exploration; Vols. VI-VIII: Literary Criticism; Vol. IX: “Eureka” and Miscellanies; and Vol. X: Poems.
It includes 10 portraits of Poe: 1) The engraving by John Sartain from the original drawing preserved in the collection of R. W. Griswold; 2) The daguerreotype in the possession of E. C. Stedman; 3) The daguerreotype in the possession of R. L. Traylor; 4) The daguerreotype in the possession of Thomas J. McKee; 5) The photograph of the Oscar Halling drawing in the possession of John Prentice Poe; 6) The photograph of a daguerreotype previously in “Stella’s” possession; 7) The portrait at the age of thirty-five that appeared in Graham's Magazine (February, 1845) engraved in steel after a painting by A. C. Smith; 8) The daguerreotype previously in the possession of Thomas H. Davidson; 9) The engraving of Timothy Cole in the possession of the Century Company; and 10) The photograph of the daguerreotype given by Poe to Mrs. Whitman and now in the possession of William Coleman.
Also, it includes a view of the Fordham cottage, a reproduction of a fragment of the manuscript of "Marginalia", a portrait of Elizabeth (Arnold) Poe, Poe's mother, from the miniature in the possession of J. H. Ingram, a view of the Allan mansion in Richmond, portrait of Virginia Clemm, Poe's wife, photographed from the watercolor in the possession of Amelia Poe, and the Manor-House School in Stoke Newington. The edition is completed with twenty illustrations by Albert Edward Sterner reproduced by photogravure.

View bibliographic reference

Illustrations

USE OF COOKIES We use first-party and third-party cookies for statistical purposes and to improve your browsing experience. If you continue browsing, you accept the use of cookies.
You can find more information and learn how to change the settings in our Cookies policy

Close