Literary Hearthstones of Dixie | Page 2

la Salle Corbell Pickett
99 Henry Timrod
"FATHER ABBOT" 125 William Gilmore Simms
"UNCLE REMUS" 151 Joel Chandler Harris
"THE POET OF THE FLAG" 175 Francis Scott Key
"THE POET-PRIEST" 201 Father Ryan
"BACON AND GREENS" 225 Dr. George William Bagby
"WOMAN AND POET" 253 Margaret Junkin Preston

"THE 'MOTHER' OF 'ST. ELMO'" 283 Augusta Evans Wilson

ILLUSTRATIONS
PAGE
THE HOME OF AUGUSTA EVANS WILSON, ASHLAND PLACE
Frontispiece EDGAR ALLAN POE 20
SIDNEY LANIER 58
HOUSE WHERE TIMROD LIVED DURING HIS LAST YEARS 116
WOODLANDS, THE HOME OF WILLIAM GILMORE SIMMS 126
JOEL CHANDLER HARRIS 156
SNAP-BEAN FARM, ATLANTA, GEORGIA 166
FRANCIS SCOTT KEY 194
FATHER RYAN 204
ST. MARY'S CHURCH, MOBILE. FATHER RYAN'S LATE
RESIDENCE ADJOINING 216
DR. GEORGE W. BAGBY 236
"AVENEL" 240

LITERARY HEARTHSTONES OF DIXIE

"THE POET OF THE NIGHT"
EDGAR ALLAN POE

"I am a Virginian; at least, I call myself one, for I have resided all my
life until within the last few years in Richmond."
Thus Edgar A. Poe wrote to a friend. The fact of his birth in Boston he
regarded as merely an unfortunate accident, or perhaps the work of that
malevolent "Imp of the Perverse" which apparently dominated his life.
That it constituted any tie between him and the "Hub of the Universe,"
unless it might be the inverted tie of opposition, he never admitted. The
love which his charming little actress mother cherished for the city in
which she had enjoyed her greatest triumphs seemed to have turned to
hatred in the heart of her brilliant and erratic son. In his short and
disastrous sojourn in Boston, when his fortunes were at their lowest ebb,
it is not likely that his thought once turned to the old house on Haskins,
now Carver, Street, where his ill-starred life began.
The reason given by Poe, "I have resided there all my life until within
the last few years," suggests but slight cause for his love of Richmond,
the home of his childhood, the darkening clouds of which, viewed
through the softening lens of years, may have shaded off to brighter
tints, as the roughness of a landscape disappears and melts into mystic,
dreamy beauty as we journey far from the scene.
The three women who had been the stars in the troubled sky of his
youth irradiated his memory of the Queen City of the South. In the
churchyard of historic old Saint John's, that once echoed to the words
of Patrick Henry, "Give me liberty or give me death!" Poe's mother lay
in an unidentified grave. In Hollywood slept his second mother, who
had surrounded his boyhood with the maternal affection that, like an
unopened rose in her heart, had awaited the coming of the little child
who was to be the sunbeam to develop it into perfect flowering. On
Shockoe Hill was the tomb of "Helen," his chum's mother, whose
beauty of face and heart brought the boyish soul
To the Glory that was Greece And the grandeur that was Rome.
Through the three-fold sanctification of the twin priestesses, Love and
Sorrow, Richmond was his home.

So Virginia claims her poet son, the tragedy of whose life is a gloomy,
though brilliant, page in the history of American literature.
There are varying stories told of Poe's Richmond home. The impression
that he was the inmate of a stately mansion, where he was trained to
extravagance which wrought disaster in later years, is not borne out by
the evidence. When the loving heart and persistent will of Mrs. Allan
opened her husband's reluctant door to the orphaned son of the
unfortunate players, that door led into the second story of the building
at the corner of Fourteenth Street and Tobacco Alley, in which Messrs.
Ellis & Allan earned a comfortable, but not luxurious, living by the sale
of the commodity which gave the alley its name. As it was customary
in those days for merchants to live in the same building with their
business, the fact that he did so does not argue that Mr. Allan was
"down on his luck," but neither does it presuppose that he was the
possessor of wealth. But it was a home in the truest sense for little
Edgar, for it was radiant with the love of the tender-hearted woman
who had brought him within its friendly walls.
From this home Mr. Allan went to London to establish a branch of the
Company business. He was accompanied by Mrs. Allan and Edgar, and
the boy was placed in the school of Stoke-Newington, shadowy with
the dim procession of the ages and gloomed over by the memory of
Eugene Aram. The pictured face of the head of the Manor School, Dr.
Bransby, indicates that the hapless boys under his care had stronger
than historic reasons for depression in that
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