Friday, November 8, 2019

The eNotes Blog This Week in PoeticHistory

This Week in PoeticHistory Just for fun: were celebrating the lives of three poets that were changed this week in history, many years ago, and examining the curious ways one turn of events can change a legacy. Here are three world-altering events from three years in poetic history The Raven Is Born On this day in 1845, Edgar Allen Poes The Raven, one of the best-known poems in the English language, was first published. But it was no easy feat getting it into print. Poe first submitted the poem his friend and owner of Grahams Magazine George Rex Graham, who declined. He did, however, give Poe $15 out of what could best be described as pity. The poem was eventually bought by  The American Review, for $9. Still, Poe was not yet to become the household name he would shortly be; the magazine printed it under the pseudonym Quarles. It was in the  Evening Mirror  that the poem first appeared with Poes name beneath it. Thanks to this publication,  Edgar Allen Poe and his Raven achieved   immediate  success,both praised by Elizabeth Barrett (Your Raven has produced a sensation, a fit o horror, here in England. Some of my friends are taken by the fear of it and some by the music. I hear of persons haunted by Nevermore') and memorized by Abraham Lincoln himself. To discover more about and celebrate this influential poem, find the annotated eText of The Raven here at . Dante Alighieri Is Exiled If it werent for an unfortunate turn of politics, would Dante have written the masterpiece we all remember him for? On January 27th, 1302, the poet was banished from Florence, where he served as one of the citys six priors. Dantes political activities, including the banishing of several rivals, led to his own banishment, and he wrote his masterpiece,  The Divine Comedy,  as a virtual wanderer, seeking protection for his family in town after town, which may or may not be akin to walking the nine circles of Hell Of course, nowhere is this experience listed as inspiration for  The Divine Comedywe just couldnt resist the temptation of a good what if!  Yet surely this must have been a time of reflection for Alighieri, as the part of his guide through Paradise, the last portion of the series, was given to a Beatrice Potinari, Dantes own childhood love and adult muse. For additional background, analysis, and critical essays of Dantes masterpiece, find the complete study guide here. The Last Poems of Yeats Are Published from His Deathbed Seventy-five years ago, celebrated Irish poet William Butler Yeats took his last breath. In the same month, three of his last poems ran in The Atlantic. As he faced his own mortality, how did the Nobel Prizewinner look back on his life and work? Heartrendingly, with little regard for his own ego or extensive achievements. In The Man and the Echo, for instance, Yeats examined his role in the 1916 Easter Rising, a bloody rebellion by Irish republicans against British rule. In the poem the poet apportions blame to himself, as the speaker confesses to his own unforgiving echo: Man. In a cleft thats christened Alt Under broken stone I halt At the bottom of a pit That broad noon has never lit, And shout a secret to the stone. All that I have said and done, Now that I am old and ill, Turns into a question till I lie awake night after night And never get the answers right. Did that play of mine send out Certain men the English shot? Did words of mine put too great strain On that womans reeling brain? Could my spoken words have checked That whereby a house lay wrecked? And all seems evil until I Sleepless would lie down and die. Echo. Lie down and die. Yeats died on January 28th, 1939 in a boarding house in Menton, France.

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