Edgar Allan Poe — "There is no exquisite beauty… without some strangeness in the proportion."
There is no exquisite beauty… without some strangeness in the proportion.
There is no exquisite beauty… without some strangeness in the proportion.
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"I have no belief in the perfectibility of human nature."
"Of puns it has been said that those who most dislike them are those who are least able to utter them."
"I have been a victim of a thousand phantasies."
"I have a great deal of what the world calls talent, but I have no application."
"I have no pleasure in the world but my books."
American Gothic poet and short-story writer who invented the detective story (Murders in the Rue Morgue) and shaped horror literature. Closely associated with Nathaniel Hawthorne (fellow American Gothic) and Charles Baudelaire (his French translator and torch-bearer). For an intellectual contrast, see Ralph Waldo Emerson, Transcendentalist optimist of self-reliance — Poe wrote essays attacking the entire Transcendentalist circle as didactic and intellectually thin — he derisively called them 'Frogpondians' and treated their cheerful mysticism as the literary opposite of his macabre realism.
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