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  1. Apr 18, 2023 · A chronological list of articles, reviews, notices and poems attributed to Poe in the New York newspaper Evening Mirror. The items are divided by volumes and include dates, page numbers and reprints in the Weekly Mirror.

    • New York Mirror

      Earlier issues of the New-York Mirror are relatively common,...

    • Poems

      “The Raven” — February 3, 1845 — New York Morning News...

  2. Mar 7, 2020 · Earlier issues of the New-York Mirror are relatively common, but the later forms, especially as the Evening Mirror, are scarce. A set of the three volumes of the New Mirror has special interest. It was given by Poe to Sarah H. Whitman (probabably around october 1848), with two items marked “P.”

  3. The New-York Mirror was a weekly newspaper published in New York City from 1823 to 1842, succeeded by The New Mirror in 1843 and 1844. Its producers then launched a daily newspaper named The Evening Mirror, which published from 1844 to 1898. History. The Mirror was founded by George Pope Morris and Samuel Woodworth in August 1823. The journal ...

  4. Printed in the New York Evening Mirror on January 23, 1845, the poem is generally accepted as being written by Poe, though it was published anonymously. The title neglected to capitalize "street."

  5. Apr 6, 2024 · “The Raven” — February 3, 1845 — New York Morning News (Apparently reprinted from the Evening Mirror.) (First documented by Claude Richard, Studies in Bibliography, 1968, p. 54, and noted in Poe Newsletter, October 1968, p. 30)

  6. editions.covecollective.org › place › evening-mirrorThe Evening Mirror | COVE

    Located at the corner of Nassau and Ann Street in New York City, The Evening Mirror was a daily newspaper that ran for roughly 15 years (1844-1859). Edgar Allan Poe worked at this site from October 1844 to Feburary 1845 as both a critic and an editor.

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  8. www.encyclopedia.com › arts › educational-magazinesThe Raven | Encyclopedia.com

    From the moment of its first publication in the New York Evening Mirror on January 29, 1845, “The Raven” has been a famous poem. It caused an immediate national sensation and was widely reprinted, discussed, parodied, and performed—catapulting its penurious and dejected thirty-six-year-old author into celebrity.