This is the kind of fight I like. I'm pulling for Bal'mer.
According to an article in the New York Times this weekend, two scholars have gotten into a clash over which city -- Philadelphia or Baltimore -- has the most claim to the legacy of Edgar Allen Poe.
Baltimore is the city most associated today with Poe. He died there in 1849. How he died is, for some, an open question. Some say it was alcoholism, some say other diseases, some even say murder. He had lost his wife about two years before that while they were living in New York City.
Poe lay in an unmarked grave in Baltimore for two decades, but then th city embraced him and today he is honored as a native son.
But Philadelphia has more claim on Poe than Baltimore, according to a Edward Pettit, a Poe scholar. It was in the City of Brotherly Love that Poe wrote some of his most famous works. Pettit argues that the city's rampant violence and crime served as a natural inspiration to Poe's marcabre outlook and his detective fiction. Poe is widely acknowledged as having invented the modern detective genre. Pettit wants Poe's body moved to Philly.
Not so fast, says Jeff Jerome, curator of the Poe House in Baltimore. Poe is too much a part of the city's lore and character to be moved now. Besides, Philadelphia is a little late in claiming Poe since the city has ignored him for 160 years.
Of course, there is always Richmond, where Poe grew up and to where he had planned to return eventually. Poe always considered himself a Virginian. But Richmond (wisely?) has not asked for the return of the body.
In all this, I stand with Baltimore, which is a far more interesting place than Philadelphia. Baltimore is a dank, working class town with no Mainline pretentions but lots of interesting character and architecture. It's the city where Edgar Allen Poe should be from, even if he isn't.
___
Note: My old blog, Staying Booked, has morphed in a new one, The Writing Wright.
|
Topics:
|
|
Discussing:
- Are Chat bots a waste of time? (1 reply)
- Smith & Wesson noise problem (1 reply)
- Musicians dropping out of President's Freedom Concert Series (1 reply)
- It's time for new blood in Congress, Barnett in - Burchett out (1 reply)
- Burning Down The House... (2 replies)
- Behind Lege Lies (1 reply)
- Peace (1 reply)
- Speak your truth, fight and believe. (1 reply)
- Large banks have too much AI data center debt? (1 reply)
- GOP misleading on federal health care funding (1 reply)
- Feds indict civil rights group (3 replies)
- Georgia issues burn ban, first time in state history (2 replies)
TN Progressive
- Smith & Wesson not a good fit for Blount County (BlountViews)
- Pellissippi Parkway extension delayed again (BlountViews)
- Blount County early voting record turnout (BlountViews)
- Louisville, TN, town center coming soon? (BlountViews)
- WATCH THIS SPACE. (Left Wing Cracker)
- America As It Is Right Now (RoaneViews)
- A friend sent this: From Captain McElwee's Tall Tales of Roane County (RoaneViews)
- The Meidas Touch (RoaneViews)
- Massive Security Breach Analysis (RoaneViews)
- (Whitescreek Journal)
- My choices in the August election (Left Wing Cracker)
- July 4, 2024 - aka The Twilight Zone (Joe Powell)
TN Politics
- Providers scramble as Tennessee tells sick, disabled immigrant kids they will be reported (TN Lookout)
- Bloody UFC cage match on White House lawn marks Trump’s 80th birthday (TN Lookout)
- Local Tennessee officials are putting data center plans on ice to consider regulations (TN Lookout)
- Judge blocks Trump’s ‘anti-weaponization’ fund until government agrees it’s been dissolved (TN Lookout)
- Five laws passed by Tennessee lawmakers in 2026 face legal challenges, so far (TN Lookout)
- Tennessee’s “Nuclear Family Month” is a slap in the face of dads fighting for their children (TN Lookout)
Knox TN Today
- TDOT outperforms on Alcoa Highway; Snowden new director (Knox TN Today)
- Abby Ham reflects on 23-year journalism career and new entrepreneurial journey (Knox TN Today)
- Wallace Real Estate expands with Bristol-based historic property specialist (Knox TN Today)
- Smoke alarms: What every household should know (Knox TN Today)
- Above & Beyond: Libraries let readers “Check Out” a person instead of a book (Knox TN Today)
- 6/16 HEADLINES: News and events from Knox, World, USA, Tennessee & Historic Notes (Knox TN Today)
- MC Computer Programming Team earns success in competition (Knox TN Today)
- How an automatic savings plan can help you reach financial goals (Knox TN Today)
- The necktie started with French nobility (Knox TN Today)
- Famous DGG is out there, DeSean Bishop is here (Knox TN Today)
- Thomas Cole: New KFD Asst. Chief, 134th Wing’s Chief Master Sergeant (Knox TN Today)
- Chris Bryant + Winston Fellows + D-Day for Derek Dooley ++ (Knox TN Today)
Local TV News
- Construction begins on new animal shelter in Anderson County (WATE)
- 17-year-old accused of killing Lenoir City teen indicted (WATE)
- Where does the Summer Wells case stand, five years later? (WATE)
- 'It's gotten complicated' Farragut residents divided over potential permanent closure of Boring Road (WATE)
- 'A lot of questions' Cleanup continues in Morgan County after train derailment (WATE)
- Federal rules complicate push for I-75 noise wall for Knoxville neighborhood (WATE)
News Sentinel
State News
- Lawyer Meredith Mochel launches campaign for Red Bank city judge - Chattanooga Times Free Press (Times Free Press)
- Teen charged in connection with disappearance of Collegedale man - Chattanooga Times Free Press (Times Free Press)
- Vols’ new strength coach may play key role in Baylor star DGG’s decision - Chattanooga Times Free Press (Times Free Press)
- Chattanooga’s July 4 drone show needed federal approval due to Spanish national team - Chattanooga Times Free Press (Times Free Press)
Wire Reports
- Bank of Japan raises rates to 1% for first time since 1995 - Financial Times (Business)
- 8 Dead in B-52 Bomber Crash at Edwards Air Force Base in California - The New York Times (US News)
- China’s Spending Slowdown Deepens as Households Tighten Their Belts - The New York Times (Business)
- Inside the fight over Claude Mythos 5 - The Verge (Business)
- Alaska boots second Dan Sullivan from Senate race - The Washington Post (US News)
- Dow closes at record high as U.S.-Iran deal lifts stocks - Honolulu Star-Advertiser (Business)
- Online portal used to send US deliveries to Cuba stops taking orders - AP News (Business)
- SpaceX Investors at US Retail Brokers Got at Least One IPO Share - Bloomberg.com (Business)
- Exclusive | GM in Talks to Supply Weapons Parts to Lockheed Martin - WSJ (Business)
- Teen accused of killing stepsister on Carnival Cruise taken into custody following adult charges - AP News (US News)
- Commentary: Trump goes after Newsom's wife? Unsurprising, but also a new level of authoritarianism - Los Angeles Times (US News)
- Algae Is Turning the Reflecting Pool Green. Again. - The New York Times (US News)
- Trump administration considers $300bn fund for Iran if deal is upheld - Financial Times (US News)
- Netanyahu says Israel won’t leave occupied land in Lebanon - Al Jazeera (US News)
- Why Fox Stock Is Tumbling After $22 Billion Roku Deal - Barron's (Business)
Local Media
Lost Medicaid Funding
Search and Archives
TN Progressive
Nearby:
- Blount Dems
- Herston TN Family Law
- Inside of Knoxville
- Instapundit
- Jack Lail
- Jim Stovall
- Knox Dems
- MoxCarm Blue Streak
- Outdoor Knoxville
- Pittman Properties
- Reality Me
- Stop Alcoa Parkway
Beyond:
- Nashville Scene
- Nashville Post
- Smart City Memphis
- TN Dems
- TN Journal
- TN Lookout
- Bob Stepno
- Facing South

Who would claim a crazy man who would write this...
It was many and many a year ago,
In a kingdom by the sea,
That a maiden there lived whom you may know
By the name of Annabel Lee;
And this maiden she lived with no other thought
Than to love and be loved by me.
I was a child and she was a child,
In this kingdom by the sea;
But we loved with a love that was more than love -
I and my Annabel Lee;
The rest...
My Junior English teacher in
My Junior English teacher in high school had a Poe fetish, we were sure that she had once dated him. We had to memorize Annabel Lee and, of course, The Raven.
Ah, distinctly I remember it was in the bleak December,
And each separate dying ember wrought its ghost upon the floor.
I hated it until I aged a few years and grew to love the memory of that old lady and her wisdom.
Visit us at
The Home
One Baltimore Tradition
As a displaced Knoxvillian living in the Baltimore area, I must point out one of Bawlmer's great Poe traditions: the Poe Toaster.
In short, every year on the anniversary of Poe's birth, someone shows up at the grave, drinks a toast with cognac, and leaves three roses (for Poe, his wife and his mother-in-law), and the remainder of the bottle. This has been going on since 1949 (it has been passed from father to son, and many feel the son has sullied the tradition.)
As an aside, I will add that, at least at one time, since I'm not sure if its still there, there was a restaurant near the gravesite called "The Tell-Tale Hearth." Its slogan was "Pizza Worth Raven About". (It was good pizza, the pun aside.) It also had a spookily lifelike mannequin of Poe.
EDIT: I checked. The Tell-Tale Hearth went out of business ages ago.
And speaking of ravens . . .
Another reason to favor Baltimore in this fight:
What NFL football team's mascot is a literary allusion?
Jim Stovall
What about..
The Titans?
Or would that be a literary I-llusion?
WhitesCreek, You got me on
WhitesCreek,
You got me on I-llusion. Bad mistake.
To what literary work does the "Titans" refer? Or is it just alliteration (il-literation?)?
Jim Stovall
To what literary work does
Either
or
My money is on the former...
Oh, I'm all about mythology.
Oh, I'm all about mythology. But actually, I wonder if Greek legends qualify as literature? I admit to stretching the point for a cheep joke, but you guys are used to that by now.
Randy may need to give me an auto-tag that says: "Lame attempt at humor and possible snark"
But actually, I wonder if
Well, the Iliad and the Odyssey are essentially Greek myths, and pretty much any commentator (except the "anti-dead-white-male" types) would consider them one of the foundations of Western literature.
I'll bet a cask of
I'll bet a cask of amontillado that Balmer wins this battle.
"When the going gets weird, the weird turn pro."
Hunter S. Thompson
Hey, Bawlmer is tough. It's
Hey, Bawlmer is tough.
It's a blue-collar port town at its heart. Bawlmer could kick Philly in the Brotherly Love any day.
I was introduced to Poe by
I was introduced to Poe by my 5th grade teacher, Miss Rattery, who had us read "The Gold-Bug" as a class participation assignment. We were a bunch of nerds collected up in one spot so they could keep us under close observation, and we wrote secret code notes to each other from then on. I never figured out what the note from Gracie Efird said but the girls all laughed at me from then on.
I have taken my family on vacation to Sullivan's Island, the setting for the Gold-bug, and talked about pirates, treasure, and secret code pirate maps in the evenings. The WWII bunkers behind the park are still way creepy to go inside, but I do it every trip to Charleston.
I don't know who the Titans
I don't know who the Titans are named after, but I know that my brother, who at the moment lives in Clarksville, believes that the Nashville teevee people are too in love with the Titans.
But the bro's wife just got a promotion that means they are moving to Bawl'mer, so I'll probably be hearing a bunch of complaints about their tee vee paying too much attention to the Ravens and the Orioles.
This is a man who until five years ago had only lived in East Tennessee and rather loves his Vols.
Pam Strickland
"We are what we pretend to be, so we must be careful about what we pretend to be." ~Kurt Vonnegut
To the tintinnabulation that
To the tintinnabulation that so musically wells
From the bells, bells, bells, bells,
Bells, bells, bells-
From the jingling and the tinkling of the bells.