Lincoln and Edgar Allan Poe

Lincoln was born only a few weeks after Poe. The author came to his attention through one of the numerous parodies of ā€œThe Raven,ā€ first published in January 1845. Johnston, a fellow lawyer, sent Lincoln one such parody, ā€œThe Pole-Cat,ā€ which led him to seek out Poe’s poem. It is said that Lincoln so appreciated the poem that he ā€œcarried Poe around on the Circuit—read and loved ā€˜The Raven’—repeated it over & over.ā€ This letter—written before Lincoln became familiar with Poe’s work— includes a poem occasioned by a return home in 1844 that ā€œaroused feelings in [him] which were extremely poetic.ā€ Redolent of the dark melancholy that suffuses the work of his noted contemporary, its final lines read: And feel (companion of the dead) / I’m living in the tombs.