Knickerbocker Magazine, XXXV, 163.
Poe's Works, ed. Stedman and Woodberry.
Edgar Allan Poe, The Man, by Mary E. Phillips, Philadelphia, 1926.
The Influence of E. T. A. Hoffmann on the Tales of Edgar Allan Poe, New York, 1908.
William Mudford (1782-1848), editor of many magazines and a frequent contributor to Blackwood's.
That Poe was a reader of Blackwood's needs no proof. His activity as editor and reviewer, and the wide circulation of that journal in America furnish general evidence. See Professor Killis Campbell's illuminating article in University of Texas Studies in English, October, 1925, pp. 166-196, entitled "Poe's Reading."
Miss Margaret Alterton, in University of Iowa Studies, Vol. 11, No. 3, pp. 27-29, calls attention to some of these parallels.
It should be noted that Poe actually mentions "The Men in the Bell" and "The Involuntary Experimentalist" in his "How to Write a Blackwood's Article."
Chapter numbering in some editions is incorrect. I refer here to my edition in the Modern Readers' Series, Macmillan, 1928.
Complete Works of Edgar Allan Poe, ed. Harrison, J. A., New York, no date (1902), XVI, 41.
Complete Works of Edgar Allan Poe, ed. Harrison, J. A., New York, no date (1902), XI, 206.
Complete Works of Edgar Allan Poe, ed. Harrison, J. A., New York, no date (1902), XII, 224.
Complete Works of Edgar Allan Poe, ed. Harrison, J. A., New York, no date (1902), XII, 249.