The Complete Poetical Works of Edgar Allan Poe

edited by
John H. Ingram



Table of Contents

[Preface]
[Memoir]
[Poems of Later Life]
[Dedication]
[Preface]
[The Raven]
[The Bells]
[Ulalume]
[To Helen]
[Annabel Lee]
[A Valentine]
[An Enigma]
[To My Mother]
[For Annie]
[To F——]
[To Frances S. Osgood]
[Eldorado]
[Eulalie]
[A Dream Within a Dream]
[To Marie Louise (Shew)]
[To The Same]
[The City in the Sea]
[The Sleeper]
[Bridal Ballad]
[Notes]
[Poems of Manhood]
[Lenore]
[To One in Paradise]
[The Coliseum]
[The Haunted Palace]
[The Conqueror Worm]
[Silence]
[Dreamland]
[To Zante]
[Hymn]
[Notes]
[Scenes from Politian]
[Note]
[Poems of Youth]
[Introduction (1831)]
[To Science]
[Al Aaraaf]
[Tamerlane]
[To Helen]
[The Valley of Unrest]
[Israfel]
[To —— ("I heed not that my earthly lot")]
[To —— ("The Bowers whereat, in dreams, I see")]
[To the River]
[Song]
[Spirits of the Dead]
[A Dream]
[Romance]
[Fairyland]
[The Lake]
[Evening Star]
[Imitation]
["The Happiest Day"]
[Hymn (Translation from the Greek)]
[Dreams]
["In Youth I have known one"]
[A Pæan]
[Notes]
[Doubtful Poems]
[Alone]
[To Isadore]
[The Village Street]
[The Forest Reverie]
[Notes]
[Prose Poems]
[The Island of the Fay]
[The Power of Words]
[The Colloquy of Monos and Una]
[The Conversation of Eiros and Charmion]
[Shadow—a Parable]
[Silence—a Fable]
[Essays]
[The Poetic Principle]
[The Philosophy of Composition]
[Old English Poetry]

[Preface]

In placing before the public this collection of Edgar Poe's poetical works, it is requisite to point out in what respects it differs from, and is superior to, the numerous collections which have preceded it. Until recently, all editions, whether American or English, of Poe's poems have been verbatim reprints of the first posthumous collection, published at New York in 1850.

In 1874 I began drawing attention to the fact that unknown and unreprinted poetry by Edgar Poe was in existence. Most, if not all, of the specimens issued in my articles have since been reprinted by different editors and publishers, but the present is the first occasion on which all the pieces referred to have been garnered into one sheaf. Besides the poems thus alluded to, this volume will be found to contain many additional pieces and extra stanzas, nowhere else published or included in Poe's works. Such verses have been gathered from printed or manuscript sources during a research extending over many years.