The Second Author
How His Life Was
For my second posting, I have decided to cover the life of Edgar Allen Poe. (This will also be a substantially shorter post than my last, as I am racing the death of my computer's battery, and it doesn't help that many details of his life have been blurred since his death).
Poe was born on January 19, 1809 in Boston. He had two siblings, Henry and Rosalie. His parents were actors, which was considered a very lowly job at the time. His father ran out on the family, and then by the age of three his mother passed away. It was at this point that a successful merchant, John Allan, allowed Poe to come and live with him and his wife. Allan did not seem to ever really bond very well with Poe, as Poe was more focused on poetry than he was on business. Perhaps because of this lack of a bond, Allan was never willing to help Poe financially. When Poe went to college at the University of Virginia in 1826, Allan only paid about a third of the difference. This was the point in which Poe began his life-long addictions to both gambling and drinking (and, consequently, debt).
After dropping out of college and then again leaving the Allan's home (there is supposedly some kind of heartbreak that had a good deal to do with his leaving), he both began publishing works and he joined the army. He began to attend a military academy, West Point, before being kicked out for "handling his duties poorly". Some speculate that he did this on purpose due to financial strain and, again, a lack of help from Allan. After he left the academy, he began focusing on his writing full-time.
During this time, he traveled around between New York, Baltimore, Philadelphia, and Richmond before deciding to stay with his aunt in Baltimore. It was there that he met his cousin, Virginia. He married her when he was aged 27 and she was 13 (some sources will say that she was 14, but records indicate that her 14th birthday was a couple of months after their wedding). They returned to Richmond where Poe was hired as a critic for a magazine, but he did not stay on long due to his combative personality and a strained relationship with the publication.
In 1847, his wife passed away. He was consumed by grief, and, while he continued to work, he was unhealthy and he still struggled with finances. This is where his story gets quite hazy. It is known tha the left Richmond on September 27, 1849 to supposedly head to Philadelphia. But, on October 3, he was found in Baltimore. He was in a state of great distress, and so he was taken to a hospital. He died four days later on October 7, and his last words were, "Lord, help my poor soul". Nobody is quite sure what he died of, although at the time it was labeled "congestion of the brain". Others believe that it may have been anything from carbon monoxide poisoning to rabies.
How His Life Would Have Been Today
Now, it's time to break down the major events of his life to see how it could have gone differently if he had lived in modern times. Let's start with his parents.
While in the early 1800's actors were looked down upon as being one of the lowest rungs of society's ladder, today a successful actor is praised and raised up to celebrity status. So, if they had been successful, then his parents might not have been poor, he may not have been mocked for their profession, and without the financial burden, they may not have separated. If all of that had been true, then he would have gone to live with his father when his mother passed away, and might never have even met Allan, let alone been raised by him.
Next, let's look at his college life. There are countless scholarships and grants available today that make a higher level education possible for many of us who would not be able to afford it otherwise. With his intelligence and his high marks, I feel positive that he would have qualified for enough to pay at least most of the cost of his schooling (that is, if his parents weren't rich famous actors with enough money to pay for the best schools available out of pocket). Without the difficulty of his financial strain, he would not have as easily fallen into his cycle of debt and gambling and alcohol abuse. He may have found his way to it anyway, but it might not have happened so early or so easily.
Now, his wife. I love Poe's works. They're amazing. But I've always found this whole deal with his wife... Pretty gross. If he had been born into today's society, there is NO WAY that would've flown (outside of travelling to some backwoods area where nobody knew or cared, anyway). First, it's illegal to marry your first cousins now. Second, it's definitely illegal to marry a 13 year old. So his "Darling Virginia", would've just been his cousin that he would see at Thanksgiving and Christmas.
Now, I didn't mention it in the previous explanation of how his life went, but a lot of the people close to him kept passing away and it's believed to be of tuberculosis. With modern medicine being the way that it is, we now know that many diseases (TB included) can attach themselves to certain hosts who are not affected by the disease but are able to spread it. They're called carriers. With as many TB related deaths around him as there were, a now popular theory is that he was actually a carrier for it. With modern medicine, we would have been able to tell that this was going on, and we would have been able to take care of it. There's a reason you don't see very much of it today.
And with that, you have the end of this blog entry. Would his life have been better if he had been born today? I'd like to say that it probably would have. But, then again, we might not have all of his works that so many of us love. Was the sacrifice of his health and virility and, eventually, his life worth it? I don't think that I'm qualified to answer that.