‘Alone’ by Edgar Allan Poe

The poem presented in this post is unlikely to chase your winter blues, to be honest, but it’s an excellent one! Penned by Edgar Allan Poe, โ€˜Aloneโ€™ is a deeply personal and intimate reflection on what is now commonly described as chronic depression. This mental health condition was the troubled poetโ€™s lifelong companion, as attested to by so many of his works.

E. A. Poe (1809โ€“1849)

In the first eight lines the poet writes about his lifelong feeling of being different from others, somehow unable to engage with the world around him in the expected and conventional ways. (I canโ€™t resist adding the word โ€˜neurotypicalโ€™ here.) The three key words – passions, sorrow, joy – speak of an intense emotional life and varied interests, but such that others couldnโ€™t relate to. Due to that, he ended up living in the world of his own making, living – and loving – according to his own terms. 

There is an inherent duality here, though: Poeโ€™s unconventional interaction with the world may have led him to shun other peopleโ€™s company (and vice versa), but it also made his perspective special and unique; his social isolation very likely contributed to his depression, but it was also what gave him the freedom and autonomy necessary for creative expression. Without it, he wouldn’t have been the man and the writer that he was.

(Just to add that it may be worthwhile to explore the classical Greek sense of the word โ€˜demonโ€™, since Poe may have alluded to that, rather than the later Christian notion of a demon as a malevolent spirit. But Iโ€™ll leave that as a homework assignment for you.)

On to the poem now! Please share your thoughts and interpretations in the comments section at the bottom of the page.


From childhoodโ€™s hour I have not been
As others wereโ€”I have not seen
As others sawโ€”I could not bring
My passions from a common springโ€”
From the same source I have not taken
My sorrowโ€”I could not awaken
My heart to joy at the same toneโ€”
And all I lovโ€™dโ€”I lovโ€™d aloneโ€”
Thenโ€”in my childhoodโ€”in the dawn
Of a most stormy lifeโ€”was drawn
From evโ€™ry depth of good and ill
The mystery which binds me stillโ€”
From the torrent, or the fountainโ€”
From the red cliff of the mountainโ€”
From the sun that โ€™round me rollโ€™d
In its autumn tint of goldโ€”
From the lightning in the sky
As it passโ€™d me flying byโ€”
From the thunder, and the stormโ€”
And the cloud that took the form
(When the rest of Heaven was blue)
Of a demon in my viewโ€”

A Short Analysis of Edgar Allan Poeโ€™s โ€˜Aloneโ€™

โ€˜Aloneโ€™ – a verse-by-verse analysis

Demon – a Wikipedia entry

Depression and language: analysing Edgar Allan Poeโ€™s writings to solve the mystery of his death


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4 Replies to “‘Alone’ by Edgar Allan Poe”

  1. Brilliant!
    This poem hit home with me as I have been deal with depression myself these past three years after the suicide death of my son. I know that demon personally. He stand before my eyes when I try to see the beauty in this world with this survivor’s guilt that haunts me daily.

    Liked by 2 people

    1. I am so sorry to hear about your loss. As a fellow sufferer from depression, I can also relate to Poe’s sentiments. People may find it awkward, but I’ve found consolation in his works.

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