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House in Stoke Newington in which Edgar Allan Poe Lived

House in Stoke Newington in which Edgar Allan Poe Lived.jpg Tomb of Edward III. in Westminster AbbeyThumbnailsMiddle class costume during French Revolution - showing Charlotte Corday capTomb of Edward III. in Westminster AbbeyThumbnailsMiddle class costume during French Revolution - showing Charlotte Corday capTomb of Edward III. in Westminster AbbeyThumbnailsMiddle class costume during French Revolution - showing Charlotte Corday capTomb of Edward III. in Westminster AbbeyThumbnailsMiddle class costume during French Revolution - showing Charlotte Corday capTomb of Edward III. in Westminster AbbeyThumbnailsMiddle class costume during French Revolution - showing Charlotte Corday capTomb of Edward III. in Westminster AbbeyThumbnailsMiddle class costume during French Revolution - showing Charlotte Corday cap

Stoke Newington is connected with the name of Edgar Allan Poe. It was here that he was at school, where he was brought over by the Allans as a child. The house still stands; it is at the corner of Edward’s Lane, which runs out of Church Street. Let us hope that the eccentricities of this wayward poet were not due to the influences of Nonconformist Newington.