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Who knows where there is Poe's literary criticism?
Edgar allan poe (1809— 1849) was an outstanding poet, novelist and writer in the 9th century.

A critic, who has written a lot in his life and dabbled in a wide range, is known as the originator of all-round detective novels and the master of horror novels.

In middle school, I fell in love with a playmate's mother, Jane Austen Steinard, and soon she died. When he was sad, he wrote a mourning poem: To Helen, which has been passed down to this day.

In Boston, with the help of Calvin Thomas, a printer, he published the first thin book of poems, named Poems of Tamerlan, and the author signed it: Bostonian. These poems are all imitations of Byron and Moore. The format is very small and the price is 12.5 cents. Unfortunately, nobody cares at all. The second book of poems, Poems of Xing and Tamerlan.

His original papers, such as Philosophy of Writing (1846), Principles of Poetry (1850), Comments on Hawthorne's Old Stories, Poems by Longfellow, Coleridge, Wordsworth and Tennyson, and Dickens' Old Antique Shop, are all displayed.

He wrote sixty or seventy short stories in his life. Although he only wrote four or five mystery novels, he is recognized as the originator of mystery novels. Masterpieces such as The Bloody Case in Mao Mu Street, The Mystery of Mary Rogge, The Case of Stealing Letters, Scarab, etc. are all regarded as precedents of this kind of novels, which have great influence on later generations. Dobbin, the amateur detective he created in his first three novels, can be said to be the predecessor of Sherlock Holmes written by Conan Doyle.