Abstract
Few would argue that Edgar Allan Poe depended upon journalism, and in particular magazines, for his professional and financial sustenance. He wrote for the magazines of his day, and he hoped to establish his own magazine-of the high-class variety. Poe regretted having to work for such popular journals as Graham's, which he edited during 1841 to 1842, because he disliked having to adapt his writing for a popular audience. That he increasingly had to do so in order to find outlets for his work is one of the issues which Poe scholars
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