Many of the most important people in Poe's life died of tuberculosis. You can see how it affected him in works like "The Raven." When he was writing it, his wife was in the next room coughing up blood. He knew he would soon be in the same situation as the narrator of "The Raven." He also wrote "The Mask of Red Death," which is about a plague that you can't hide from that makes you cough of blood and die even if you barricade yourself in a fortress and allow no one in. So yeah, it affected him pretty deeply.
Edgar Allan poe didnt have tuberculosis because he had a gene of it and spread it to everyone mostly the loved ones
BAD. Edgar Allan Poe believed that every woman that he loved was cursed.
The disease that killed most of Edgar Allan Poe's female family members was tuberculosis. It was a common and deadly illness during that time period, and sadly, it took the lives of many people, including Poe's loved ones.
11 loved ones
he loved animals but he had a wife too
He wanted:to be accepted as a son by his foster father, John Allanto be loved, he was always searching for a mother figureto be praised, Poe loved getting acknowledgements and being famousI think, that if tuberculosis didn't exsist, and that his foster father accepted/loved him that Poe would be dramatically a different man. A different writer.Many people in his life either died or became his enemy. Tuberculosis was a killer.
It was great! He loved her to death! He did everything he could to make her happy!
idk probably make new stories, tales, or poems cause that is what he loved to do.
so one time a man by the name of edgar allan poe married this amazing women that was his first cousin. he loved her so much he made a poptart and it was a smores poptart and he gave her 3/4 of the poptart thats how much he loved her.THE END
he found happiness when the women he loved were alive. For example, he was most happy when he married his cousin
"The Raven" by Edgar Allan Poe is a poem about grief and loss, with the raven symbolizing a constant reminder of the protagonist's sorrow and inability to move on from the death of his loved one. The repetitive and haunting refrain of "Nevermore" reinforces the theme of despair and the inevitability of loss.
How you would feel after a loved one has died, how death is inevitable. Sad, depressed, oppressed and dismal tone.