Text-01 — “The Journal of Julius Rodman” — 1839 — (There are no
known draft manuscripts or scratch notes reflecting the original effort of composition.)
Text-02 — “The Journal of Julius Rodman” — 1839-1840 (Speculated
faircopy manuscript or manuscripts, prepared for publication. Because Poe was at this time an editor of the
magazine, he may have been able to use material in a somewhat rougher form, and made additional changes in proof.)
Text-02a — “The Journal of Julius Rodman” — 1839-1840
Text-02b — “The Journal of Julius Rodman” — 1840 —
Burton's — (Mabbott/Pollin text A) (This is the Mabbott/Pollin copy-text)
“[[The Journal of Julius Rodman - Chapters VII-XII]]” — (according
to an editorial note on the cover of the issue of January 1840, there were to be 12 installments of the
story. The series was discontinued after Poe's split with W. E. Burton, and there is no evidence that
any of the material was written after chapter 6.)
Reprints:
“The Journal of Julius Rodman”
(includes a substantial excerpt of Chapter IV, omitting the illustration and the sentence referring to it, and a
much smaller excerpt of Chapter III, in that order) — November 3, 1877 — Mirror of Literature
(London), vol. I, no. 1, pp. 9-10 (A clipping of this rare item is in the Ingram collection at U. of VA.)
“The Journal of Julius Rodman” — 1884 — Works (Ingram) (London:
John C. Nimmo) (Ingram was the first to reprint the full text, dropping the illustration of the Indian and the
text that drew attention to it. It was first included, in vol. IV on pages 3-90, in the 1884 edition, then called
Tales and Poems of Edgar Allan Poe.)
“The Journal of Julius Rodman” — 1894-1895 — The Tales and Poems of
Edgar Allan Poe, Philadelphia: George Barrie (5:169-256).
“The Journal of Julius Rodman” — 1902 — The Complete Works of Edgar
Allan Poe, New York: G. P. Putnam's Sons (4:35-143)
The Journal of Julius Rodman — 1947 — San Francisco: Colt Press (the first reprint to restore
the illustration of the Indian riding the horse)
Scholarly and Noteworthy Reprints:
“The Journal of Julius
Rodman” — 1894-1895 — The Works of Edgar Allan Poe, vol. 5: Tales, eds. E. C. Stedman
and G. E. Woodberry, Chicago: Stone and Kimball (5:255-351, and 5:359-361) (This is the first American reprint of
the story, using Ingram's text.)
“The Journal of Julius
Rodman” — 1902 — The Complete Works of Edgar Allan Poe, vol. 4: Tales III, ed. J.
A. Harrison, New York: T. Y. Crowell (4:9-101, and 4:277-278)
“The Journal of Julius
Rodman” — 1981 — The Collected Writings of Edgar Allan Poe, vol 1.: The
Imaginary Voyages, ed. B. R. Pollin, Boston: Twayne Publishers (1:507-653).
“The Journal of Julius Rodman” — 1984 — Edgar Allan Poe: Poetry and
Tales, Patrick F. Quinn (New York: Library of America), pp. 1183-1255
∞∞∞∞∞∞∞
Comparative and Study Texts:
Instream Comparative and Study Texts:
None.
∞∞∞∞∞∞∞
Associated Material and Special Versions:
Miscellaneous Texts and Related Items:
“A Dangerous Adventure” — June 20, 1840 — Boston Weekly
Magazine (Boston, MA), vol. II, no. 40, pp. 316-317 (a long fragment, from “During our sojourn here,
an incident of note” to “had made his way down its bed to the river shore.” There is an
introductory note: “(We extract the following account of a hazardous adventure from ‘Julius
Rodman's Journal of the first passage ever achieved across the Rocky Mountains,’ published in
Burton's Magazine).” (Information on this item was provided by Ton Fafianie in an e-mail to the Poe
Society dated March 18, 2019.)
“A Dangerous Adventure” — July 24 1841 — Bradshaw's Manchester
Journal (Manchester, UK), vol. I, no. 13, pp. 202-204 (the same long fragment quoted in the Boston Weekly
Magazine of June 20, 1840). (Information on this item was provided by Ton Fafianie in an e-mail to the Poe
Society dated March 18, 2019.)
“Le Journal de Julius Rodman” — 1882 — Contes Grotesques par Edgar
Poe, Paris: Paul Ollendorff, pp. 169-200 (French translation by Émile Hennequin of three long
extracts, from chapters 3-5, with linking commentary and summaries by the translator. Hennequin follows Ingram in
omitting the woodcut illustration of the Indian and the sentence which refers to it.)
“Le Journal de Julius Rodman” — (French translation of the complete text, as
much as Poe published, by M. D. Calvocoressi)
“Le Journal de Julius Rodman” — April 16-May 1, 1913 — Le
Mercure de France (Paris)
“Le Journal de Julius Rodman” — part I — April 16, 1913
“Le Journal de Julius Rodman” — part II — May 1, 1913
“Le Journal de Julius Rodman” — 1914 — Edgar Poe: Histories
étranges et Merrveilleuses, Paris: Mercure de France (proceeded by an introduction by the translator)
“The Journal of Julius Rodman” — 2009 — Audio book (unabridged), read
by Chris Aruffo (part of a 6-CD set)
∞∞∞∞∞∞∞
Bibliography:
Achilles, Jochen, “Edgar Allan Poe's Dreamscapes and the Transcendentalist View of
Nature,” Amerikastudien/American Studies, 1995, 40:553-573
Clarke, Lewis Gaylord, [review of “Poe's Journal of Julius Rodman”],
Knickerbocker (August 18, 1838), 12:167.
Crawford, Polly R., “Lewis-Clark's Expedition as a Source of Poe's
‘The Journal of Julius Rodman’,” University of Texas Studies in English (1932),
12:158-170.
Farrell, Grace, “Dream Texts: The Narrative of Arthur Gordon Pym and the
Journal of Julius Rodman,” in Companion to Poe Studies, ed. Eric W. Carlson, Westport, CT:
Greenwood Press, 1996, pp. 209-235
Heartman, Charles F. and James R. Canny, A Bibliography of First Printings of the Writings
of Edgar Allan Poe, Hattiesburg, MS: The Book Farm, 1943.
Kime, Wayne R., “Poe's Use of Irving's Astoria in ‘The Journal of
Julius Rodman’,” American Literature (May 1968), 40:215-222.
Kime, Wayne R., “Poe's Use of MacKenzie's Voyages in ‘The Journal
of Julius Rodman’,” Western American Literature (Spring 1968), 3:61-67.
Levine, Stuart, “Poe's ‘The Journal of Julius Rodman,’ Judaism,
Plagiarism, and the Wild West,” Midwest Quarterly (Spring 1960), 1:245-259.
Ljungquist, Kent P., The Grand and the Fair: Poe's Landscape Aesthetics and Pictorial
Techniques, Potomac, MD: Scripta Humanistica, 1984. {“Rodman” is specifically discussed on pp.
10-14 and 44-46.)
Mainville, Stephen, “Language and the Void: Gothic Landscapes in the Frontiers of Edgar
Allan Poe,” Genre (1981), 14:347-362.
Nelson, William, “Julius Rodman and His Journey: Notes on the Publication in
Burton's Gentleman's Magazine,” Magazine of American History (March 1891),
25:255-256
Pollin, Burton R., ed., The Collected Writings of Edgar Allan Poe; Vol I- The
Imaginary Voyages (Including The Narrative of Arthur Gordon Pym, The Unparalled Adventure of one
Hans Pfaall and The Journal of Julius Rodman), Boston: Twayne Publishers, 1981.
Saxena, M. C., “Evident Rapture: Poe's Journal of Julius Rodman as Western
Narrative,” Indian Journal of American Studies (1977), 7:41-53.
Teunissen, John J. and Evelyn J. Hinz, “Poe's Journal of Julius Rodman as
Parody,” Nineteenth Century Fiction (1972), 27:317-338.
Turner, Arlin, “A Note on Poe's ‘The Journal of Julius Rodman’,”
University of Texas Studies in English (1930), 10:147-151.
Turner, Arlin, “Another Source of Poe's ‘The Journal of Julius
Rodman’,” American Literature (March 1936), 8:69-70.
Weissberg, Liliane, “Editing Adventures: Writing the Text of Julius
Rodman,” Modern Fiction Studies (1987), 33:413-430.
Wyllie, John Cooke, “A List of the Texts of Poe's Tales,” Humanistic
Studies in Honor of John Calvin Metcalf, Charlottesville: University of Virginia, 1941, pp. 322-338.
∞∞∞∞∞∞∞
[S:0 - JAS] - Edgar Allan Poe Society of Baltimore - Works - Tales - The Journal of Julius
Rodman