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  2. Al Aaraaf - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Al_Aaraaf

    The star which prompted Poe to write "Al Aaraaf" was believed to foretell disaster or that humanity would be punished for breaking God's laws. [5] Poe may have gotten the idea to base a poem on Brahe's astronomical discovery from poet John Keats's use of the 1781 discovery of the planet Uranus in a poem called "On First Looking into Chapman's ...

  3. Path of Exile - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Path_of_Exile

    [94] [95] [96] Versions of former leagues Harvest and Heist are incorporated into the core game. [95] 3.14 Ultimatum: 16 April 2021 The expansion introduced the Ultimatum league as well as overhauling the loot of past leagues' content that was incorporated into the core game in the past. [97] Ritual was also added to the core game. [98] 3.15 ...

  4. Eldorado (poem) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eldorado_(poem)

    "Eldorado" was one of Poe's last poems. As Poe scholar Scott Peeples wrote, the poem is "a fitting close to a discussion of Poe's career." [6] Like the subject of the poem, Poe was on a quest for success or happiness and, despite spending his life searching for it, he eventually loses his strength and faces death. [6]

  5. Poems by Edgar Allan Poe - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Poems_by_Edgar_Allan_Poe

    Poe's friend Thomas Holley Chivers said "Israfil" comes the closest to matching Poe's ideal of the art of poetry. [32] "Israfel" varies in meter; however, it contains mostly iambic feet, complemented by end rhyme in which several of the lines in each stanza rhyme together. Poe also uses frequent alliteration within each line in any given stanza.

  6. Chivers' Life of Poe - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chivers'_Life_of_Poe

    Chivers' Life of Poe is a biography concerning the American writer and poet Edgar Allan Poe as written by his friend and fellow poet Thomas Holley Chivers.The majority of the work remained in manuscript form as the "New Life of Edgar Allan Poe" until 1952, when it was edited and published by the American academic Richard Beale Davis.

  7. Tamerlane (poem) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tamerlane_(poem)

    "Tamerlane" is the Latinized name of a 14th-century historical figure.. The main themes of "Tamerlane" are independence and pride [3] as well as loss and exile. [4] Poe may have written the poem based on his own loss of his early love, Sarah Elmira Royster, [5] his birth mother Eliza Poe, or his foster-mother Frances Allan. [4]

  8. The Poetic Principle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Poetic_Principle

    The essay was based on a lecture that Poe gave in Providence, Rhode Island at the Franklin Lyceum.The lecture reportedly drew an audience of 2,000 people. [2]Some Poe scholars have suggested that "The Poetic Principle" was inspired in part by the critical failure of his two early poems "Al Aaraaf" and "Tamerlane", after which he never wrote another long poem.

  9. The Imp of the Perverse - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Imp_of_the_Perverse

    The narrator explains at length his theory on "The Imp of the Perverse", which he believes causes people to commit acts against their self-interest.This essay-like discussion is presented objectively, though the narrator admits that he is "one of the many uncounted victims of the Imp of the Perverse". [1]