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Carolina chansons

Chapter 57: BIBLIOGRAPHY
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About This Book

A lyrical collection of poems and prose sketches rooted in the coastal Low Country, pairing impressionistic landscape scenes with retellings of local legends, folktales, and maritime episodes. Voices of indigenous people, enslaved and free Black communities, and long-settled residents intermingle with meditations on memory, loss, and change; imagery centers on marshes, sea islands, and decaying plantation places. Several pieces frame supernatural and folkloric themes alongside elegiac reflections on war, seafaring, and cultural mixture, and short prose notes supply historical background for selected poems.



NOTE ON POE

To Accompany "Edgar Allan Poe" and "Alchemy"

In May, 1828, Poe enlisted in the army under the name of Edgar A. Perry, and was assigned to Battery "H" of the First Artillery at Fort Independence. In October his battery was ordered to Fort Moultrie, Charleston, S.C. Poe spent a whole year on Sullivan's Island. Professor C. Alphonso Smith, the well-known Poe authority, says, "So far as I know, this was the only tropical background that Poe had ever seen." That the susceptible nature of the young poet was vastly impressed by the weirdness and melancholy scenery of the Carolina coast country, there can be very little doubt. The dank tarns and funereal woodlands of his landscapes, or at least the strong suggestion of them, may all be found here, and the scene of The Goldbug is definitely laid on Sullivan's Island. Here are dim family vaults, and tracts of country in which the House of Usher might well stand.

"Dim vales and shadowy floods
And cloudy-looking woods
Whose forms we can't discover,
From the tears that drip all over"

was written while Poe was in the army at Fort Moultrie, and appeared in his second volume in 1829. There are later echoes.

"Around by lifting winds forgot
Resignedly beneath the sky
The melancholy waters lie."

H.A.



"MARSH TACKIES"

"Marsh Tackies" is the name given by the negroes to the little, wild horses of the Carolina coast country's swamps and sea islands. Early traditions say that these horses were found by the English when they first came and that they are the descendants of runaways from the Spanish settlements to the South about St. Augustine, or horses turned loose by DeSoto upon his ill-fated march to the Mississippi. These horses pick up a precarious living in out-of-the-way sections along the coast, and are occasionally taken and broken in by the negroes. They are the "poor horse trash" of the section.


BIBLIOGRAPHY

Alstons and Allstons of South CarolinaS.C. Graves
Annual Report of the Am. Hist. Ass.1913
Aaron Burr, Memoirs, Life, and Letters
Charleston CourierOld Files
Charleston MercuryOld Files
Charleston the Place and the PeopleRavenel
Colonial History of South CarolinaLawson
Defense of Charleston HarborJohnson
Diary from DixieChestnut
Edgar Allan PoeWoodbury
Edgar Allan Poe, How to Know HimSmith
Edgar Allen PoeHarrison
Mobile MercuryOld Files
Proceedings of the American Philos. Soc.Vol. XXVI
Pirates, The CarolinaHughson, Johns Hopkins
 Press Pamphlet
SubmarinesPamphlet, Smythe, A.T., Jr.
South Carolina Historical and Genealogical MagazineVol. XIV
TheodosiaPidgin