Authors:
Historic Era:
Historic Theme:
Subject:
April 1956 | Volume 7, Issue 3
Authors:
Historic Era:
Historic Theme:
Subject:
April 1956 | Volume 7, Issue 3
After the death of Edgar Allan Poe in 1849, 1819 his mother-in-law, Mrs. Clemm, turned to the sale of romance by trying to convince certain ladies that they were the inspirations for Poe’s poems. In actual fact, she knew that “Annabel Lee” had been inspired by her own daughter Virginia, Poe’s wife, and that “To Helen” honored two other people—Poe’s foster mother, Mrs. Frances Allan, and the mother of a boyhood playmate. All three of these women, by now, were dead.
But Mrs. Clemm never nerved herself to brace the woman depicted in “Lenore”—Mrs. Elmira Royster Shelton, who was Poe’s first sweetheart when he was a boy and who represented the final haven when he returned to Richmond at the end of his tormented mortal journey.
For months before he made this final trip back to Richmond, Poe had turned desperately in his thoughts to his “lost Lenore.” This was not entirely a sentimental turning. An exhausted man and the loneliest of earth’s mortals, Poe was groping for security and a home. And the Richmond to which he returned just before his death was the scene of the first psychic disasters of his early, formative years.
At the beginning, Richmond was the environment a dramatist would have chosen to highlight the adventures of a sensitive orphan, different from his fellows and yet longing to belong. It was a society of families; the individual was always subordinate—first to the clan, then to the class. And John Allan, who adopted Poe when Poe became an orphan at three, was a coldly ambitious social climber, who accepted this offspring of theatrical people only to please his childless wife.
Allan had come to Richmond from Scotland in 1811. His successful uncle had already established himself in the community, but despite his uncle’s help and his own shrewdness, Allan never did too well as a merchant, and his finances were fairly well involved until he inherited the bulk of his uncle’s fat estate in 1825. He was a flinty man, lustful and self-righteous.
Mrs. Allan was of softer fiber. Born of gentle people in the Virginia plantation country, she was delicate and warmhearted, and she was among the ladies who charitably administered to Mrs. Poe when the young actress lay dying in a theatrical rooming house in the old Bird-in-Hand section of Richmond. In that. December, Poe was not quite three and, while he could not have remembered his mother physically, he was definitely affected by her loss. Since his father had decamped earlier and Mrs. Poe’s travels as an actress removed her little family from kinspeople, the affectionate child was very close to her.
The orphan transferred this love to the gentle Mrs. Allan, who took him to her home the day after his mother died, and he showed a deep need to regard the Allans as his parents—“Ma” and “Pa,” as he called them. Frances Allan certainly lavished affection on