When Poe died, he was buried, rather unceremoniously, in an unmarked grave in a Baltimore graveyard. Twenty-six years later, a statue was erected, honoring Poe, near the graveyard’s entrance. Poe’s coffin was dug up, and his remains exhumed, in order to be moved to the new place of honor. But more than two decades of buried decay had not been kind to Poe’s coffin—or the corpse within it—and the apparatus fell apart as workers tried to move it from one part of the graveyard to another. Little remained of Poe’s body, but one worker did remark on a strange feature of Poe’s skull: a mass rolling around inside. Newspapers of the day claimed that the clump was Poe’s brain, shriveled yet intact after almost three decades in the ground.I don't believe a brain tumor or any other body tissue would calcify after death (unless there were some unusual mineralogical conditions in the soil), but some neoplasms such as meningiomas and various metastases do calcify during life. Interesting.
We know, today, that the mass could not be Poe’s brain, which is one of the first parts of the body to rot after death. But Matthew Pearl, an American author who wrote a novel about Poe’s death, was nonetheless intrigued by this clump. He contacted a forensic pathologist, who told him that while the clump couldn’t be a brain, it could be a brain tumor, which can calcify after death into hard masses.
Home » medicine » What was in Edgar Allan Poe's head?
Thursday, October 23, 2014
What was in Edgar Allan Poe's head?
mariyam | 9:46 AM | literature | medicine
Many years ago I spent a lot of time studying the life and works of Edgar Allan Poe (see this manuscript), but do not remember previously having read this account of his exhumation:
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Search
Popular Posts
-
We'll begin with the photograph above (credit here , via BoingBoing 2006): "...the community of Beloit, Wisconsin came together on...
-
The Faulkner Glossary contains both local Mississippi dialect words and the "highfalutin" words of conventional English used by t...
-
YouTube link . Anders Lund Madsen is a professional comedian. These supplemental notes from the uploader/subtitler: The reason i didn'...
-
I learned from reading Collector's Weekly that there are people who collect chewing gum. In the U.S., there are about half a dozen ser...
-
This is likely to have some effect on food prices in the United States. Nearly the entire Golden State – 99.81 percent to be exact — is in t...
-
From the collections of the Musée "Bible et Terre Sainte" - This stone mask from the pre-ceramic neolithic period dates to 7000 ...
-
A tourist seeking to take pictures of Yellowstone National Park crashed a camera-equipped drone into its largest hot spring , possibly dama...
-
My curiosity started with the above image, from a bestiary quiz at Medievalists.net . The creature depicted is identified as a beaver, but ...
-
Herewith three selections from a gallery of iceberg photos at The Telegraph . Top photo credit to Steppes Travel. The beautifully-laminate...
Blog Archive
-
▼
2014
(286)
-
▼
October
(72)
- Probably the oldest mask in the world
- Minnesota considering ban on neonicotinoids
- Solar eclipse as seen from space
- The Yazidis
- The epitome of "cheerful"
- The "Pillar portrait" of the Bronte sisters
- Dunes on a comet
- Eagle-eye view
- King Tut's poor health
- Sunlight reflected onto a brick wall
- The world asks the U.S. to end its embargo of Cuba
- "Catcalling." What it's like being a girl in New ...
- Firefighters' rescue masks - updated
- A closer look at the "Disabled Veterans National F...
- This is an average American man
- A "hundred" used to mean 120
- Iraqi girls on their way to school
- Salamander traffic jam
- Some old books had feet
- What was in Edgar Allan Poe's head?
- "Fear not for the future..."
- "Fearbola"
- Interesting demographics
- The University of North Carolina "student-athlete"...
- Two more weeks of this...
- This is NOT the skull of an extraterrestrial alien...
- Comparing butter and margarine
- The history of Half-Price Books
- Pocket globes
- A new gallery for New Mexico photography
- Patronize your local arboretum
- Why the Kansas City baseball team is the "Royals"
- Astronaut uses candy corn in zero gravity to expla...
- Large American cities ranked liberal to conservative
- "Two trillion rotations per second"
- "The Bricklayer's Lament"
- Musing about the origin of WWI
- "All this happened, more or less."
- The pure joy of "one last time"
- "Cross sea" and "cross swell" - updated re the Écl...
- uoıʇɐıɹɐʌ ןǝǝɥʍ ɹǝʇsɯɐɥ
- Ebola costumes for Halloween?
- This auroral "corona" is an optical illusion
- "Motor Vehicle Services" looks like a scam
- I'm old enough to remember full-sized Snickers at ...
- Ten more "bets you will always win"
- "Mommy, what's an Icelandic incest-blocker?"
- Quilling
- Autism as "a disorder of prediction"
- A song about Ebola from 1998
- "Sociolect" distinguished from "dialect"
- Found at a yard sale ($2.00)
- "Lordly indifference of Nature"
- Not a hornet
- How cherries are harvested. And walnuts.
- Cable TV remote for an elderly parent with dementia
- What's another word for "drone" ?
- President James Madison may have had epilepsy
- "Rookie cookies" for marijuana tourists
- Codpieces and willy warmers
- It is possible TYWKIWDBI has been nominated for a ...
- Polyphonic overtone singing
- "Doubly-landlocked"
- Pas de deux
- "I've had a wonderful time - but this wasn't it"
- Thai body modification
- Immense trichobezoar
- Temari
- Four HOURS of classic cartoons
- Awesome
- A reminder that digital photos contain private inf...
- Hair
-
▼
October
(72)
No comments:
Post a Comment