Eliza Poe | |
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![]() The only known image of Eliza Poe[1] | |
Born | Elizabeth Arnold 1787 London, England |
Died | December 8, 1811 (aged 23–24) Richmond, Virginia, U.S. |
Resting place | St. John's Episcopal Church (Richmond, Virginia) |
Occupation | Actress |
Years active | 1796–1811 |
Spouses | |
Children | William Edgar Rosalie |
Eliza Poe (néeElizabeth Arnold; formerlyHopkins; 1787 – December 8, 1811) was an English-American actress and the mother of the American authorEdgar Allan Poe.
Arnold was born to Henry and Elizabeth Arnold inLondon in the spring of 1787.[1] Her mother was a stage actress in London from 1791 to 1795. Her father Henry is thought to have died in 1790. In November 1795, Eliza and her mother sailed from England toBoston,Massachusetts, where they arrived on January 3, 1796.[1]
InBoston, Arnold debuted on stage at the age of nine, only three months after her arrival in the United States.[2] She played a character named Biddy Blair inDavid Garrick'sfarceMiss in Her Teens and was praised in thePortland Herald:[1] "Miss Arnold, in Miss Biddy, exceeded all praise.. Although a miss of only nine years old, her powers as an Actress will do credit to any of her sex of maturer age".[2] Later that year, Elizabeth married musician Charles Tubbs, who had sailed with the Arnolds from England. The small family joined with a manager Mr. Edgar to form a theater troupe called the Charleston Comedians. Elizabeth, Eliza's mother, died sometime while this troupe was traveling throughNorth Carolina.[3] Little is known about her death but she disappears from theatrical records in 1798 and it is presumed she died shortly after.[2]
After her mother's death, Eliza stayed with the theater troupe. She followed the tradition at the time for actors to travel from city to city to perform for as long as several months before moving on. The actors, theaters, and audiences had a wide range of sophistication. One of the most impressive venues at which she performed was theChestnut Street Theater nearIndependence Hall inPhiladelphia, which seated 2,000.[3] Over the course of her career she played some 300 parts, as well as choral and dancing roles, includingWilliam Shakespeare charactersJuliet Capulet andOphelia.[2]
In the summer of 1802, at the age of fifteen, Eliza married Charles Hopkins.[2] Hopkins died three years later in October 1805, possibly ofyellow fever, leaving Eliza an 18-year-old widow.[4] TheBaltimore-bornDavid Poe Jr. saw Eliza performing inNorfolk, Virginia, and decided to join her acting troupe, abandoning his family's plans for him to study law.[5] Poe married Eliza only six months after Hopkins's death in 1806.[6]
The couple traveled throughoutNew England and the rest of the northeast, playing in various towns such asRichmond,Philadelphia, and at an outdoor summer theater inNew York City before finally settling in Boston. They stayed in Boston for three consecutive seasons of thirty weeks each in a theater that fit an audience of about one thousand.[4] Reviews at the time often remarked on Eliza's "interesting figure" and "sweetly melodious voice".[5]
Though times were difficult, the couple had two sons;William Henry Leonard was born in January 1807, nine months after their wedding,[6] andEdgar was born on January 19, 1809, at a boarding house nearBoston Common, close to where their troupe was performing.[7] Eliza performed until 10 days before Edgar's birth and may have named her second son after the Mr. Edgar who led the Charleston Comedians.[8]
The family relocated toNew York City in the summer of 1809. Eliza had often been praised for her acting ability while David's performances were routinely criticized harshly, possibly due to his ownstage fright.[4] David, an ill-temperedalcoholic,[6] abandoned the stage and his family about six weeks after moving to New York.[9] Though David's fate is unknown, there is some evidence to suggest he died in Norfolk on December 11, 1811.[10][11] Eliza gave birth to a third child, a daughter she calledRosalie, in December 1810. Eliza continued traveling as she performed.[citation needed]
In 1811, while staying at aboarding house inRichmond, Virginia, for a performance, Eliza began spitting blood.[12] Her performances became less frequent until October 1811 when she stopped appearing altogether.[13] Her last performance was on October 11, 1811, as Countess Wintersen in a play calledThe Stranger.[14]
Friends and fellow actors Mr. and Mrs. Luke Usher (the name may have inspired Poe's tale "The Fall of the House of Usher"[15]) took care of the children during Eliza's illness and many in the Richmond area took an interest in her health. On November 29 of that year, theRichmond Theater announced abenefit performance on her behalf. A local publication, theEnquirer, reported her need for help: "On this night,Mrs. Poe, lingering on the bed of disease and surrounded by her children, asks your assistance andasks it perhaps for the last time".[10]
Eliza finally died on Sunday morning, December 8, 1811, at the age of twenty-four,[13] surrounded by her children.[7] It is generally assumed that she died oftuberculosis.[1][16] She is buried atSt. John's Episcopal Church in Richmond. Though her actual burying place is unknown, a memorial marks the general area.[17]
After her death, her three children were split up. William Henry Leonard Poe lived with his paternal grandparents in Baltimore, Edgar Poe was taken in by John and Frances Allan in Richmond, and Rosalie Poe was adopted by William and Jane Scott Mackenzie in Richmond, Virginia.[18]
Though he was young when she died,Edgar Allan Poe was heavily affected by Eliza Poe's death and many of his works reflect her influence. His first published work "Metzengerstein" features a fire burning down a large home, possibly reflecting thefire that destroyed the Richmond Theatre, where she had performed. The fire occurred in December 1811, only three weeks after her death.[19]
The early loss of his mother and other women, including his wifeVirginia, may also have inspired Edgar Poe's often-used literary theme of dying women.[20] This theme is readily present in works like "The Raven".[21]