Enigma

Enigma by Edgar Allan Poe 

Story copied from the Wikisource.

Warning: This is a Poe's Poetry.

For the Baltimore Visiter The noblest name in Allegory's page, The hand that traced inexorable rage; A pleasing moralist whose page refined, Displays the deepest knowledge of the mind; A tender poet of a foreign tongue, (Indited in the language that he sung.) A bard of brilliant but unlicensed page At once the shame and glory of our age, The prince of harmony and stirling sense, The ancient dramatist of eminence, The bard that paints imagination's powers, And him whose song revives departed hours, Once more an ancient tragic bard recall, In boldness of design surpassing all. These names when rightly read, a name [make] known Which gathers all their glories in its own. -The End- [This poem is attributed to Poe by Thomas Ollive Mabbott, who also gives the answers to the puzzles as: line - author: 1 - Spenser 2 - Homer 3-4 - Aristotle 5-6 - Kallimachos 7-8 - Shelley 9 - Alexander Pope. 10 - Euripides 11 - Mark Akenside 12 - Samuel Rogers 13-14 - Euripidies 15-16 - William Shakespeare] [As evidenced by his Tamerlane and Other Poems (1827), Poe was fond of the rhyme of "power" and "hour," here used in plural form.]