Did You Know That Edgar Allan Poe Had
a Scandalous Romance With a Providence Poet?

The tortured poet’s tell-tale heart fell for fellow writer Sarah Helen Whitman in 1848

Edgar Allan Poe met and courted Providence poet Sarah Helen Whitman in 1848 after they bonded over literature and their shared fascination of the afterlife.
Ultima Thule daguerreotype/John Nelson Arnold, Brown University
Share
Edgar Allan Poe met and courted Providence poet Sarah Helen Whitman in 1848 after they bonded over literature and their shared fascination of the afterlife.
Ultima Thule daguerreotype/John Nelson Arnold, Brown University
Did You Know That Edgar Allan Poe Had
a Scandalous Romance With a Providence Poet?
Copy

Edgar Allan Poe really was the epitome of a tortured poet, having a tragic upbringing with his father abandoning his family and his mother dying when he was only 2 years old. The Boston-born writer led a very unconventional life, including a scandalous relationship with a Rhode Island poet.

After publishing “The Raven” in 1845, Poe became a household name. That same year he met fellow poet Sarah Helen Whitman during a short trip to Providence. Poe bonded with the well-known Providence poet, essayist, spiritualist, and transcendentalist over their shared love for literature and their fascination with the afterlife.

Poe proposed to Whitman in a local cemetery in 1848 and was rejected, but she relented after several more attempts. But the wedding never came to pass, and Poe died less than a year later.

Get the full story in the reel below.

State Sen. Jessica de la Cruz is proposing a phased 10% income tax cut over five years, arguing the state’s core problem is spending, not revenue
Backed by students, the plan expands school libraries statewide while budget questions loom
Lawsuit over residency rules halts new retail permits and leaves applicants in limbo
After requesting more time, Mayor Ken Hopkins is expected to propose significant cuts and potential layoffs
With assisted migration, humans help move plant species into areas more suitable for their growth. But are there potential downsides to this human-led movement?
A $300 million payment dispute and a 2024 blade failure fuel a high-stakes legal fight over the future of the project