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The Man Who Called Himself Poe

Page 6

by Sam Moskowitz


  unhappy one of the party. He thought it so tame an ending

  for our flight, he was half unwilling to return again. That

  afternoon and night he was exceedingly gloomy and held

  aloof.

  For the last time we lighted the torches and kindled

  the fire; for the last time we, each in turn, told our stories.

  Poe alone had not spoken. We had left him to himself.

  * See the Poem

  34

  THE m a n w h o c a l l e d HIM SELF POE

  Thomas Goode Tucker had just finished a tale of a sweet

  and tender nature. The old story of two lovers—a grievous

  misunderstanding, a cruel separation, a happy reconciliation.

  It was a restful bit of human nature, a trifle commonplace,

  but so restfully, charmingly told as to gain a forgiveness for

  its evident touch of everyday life. During the little pause

  that follows the telling of any good story, Poe, still full of

  gloom, strode in from out of the shadows and stood in our

  midst with folded arms, and told his story.

  To-night the recollection of those burning words, slow and

  distinctly uttered, rise before me in all of their original fresh-

  ness and in all of their original horror. On the day after, I

  alone of that little party expressed a willingness to return

  some day to that spot in the Ragged Mountains where we

  had listened to that strange story, so wonderfully and

  strangely told.

  His first words, delivered in a slow, monotonous tone,

  were those mysterious lines found in the poem—

  “ Over the lilies there that wave

  And weep above a nameless g ra v e ”

  He paused, then pointed to a little clump of early spring

  lilies. They were just coming into bloom. They were growing

  into beauty beneath the shadows of a large hemlock, on the

  inner edge of the firelight glow, plainly in the sight of all.

  Somehow, instantaneously, came the thought to each one of

  us, how like a grave-mound those clustered filies had shaped

  themselves as they grew.

  “No; you are wrong,״ he said, seeming to divine our very

  thought; the shape of yonder bed of fair lilies is but a fore-

  shadowing of a grave yet to be there—a grave that shall

  be forever nameless. No one now lies beneath the purity

  of those blossoms. Their fragrance and their liveliness are

  not stolen from any human mold slowly decaying beneath

  the dark, rich soil. Out in the blackness of the night, beyond

  THE M AN WHO CALLED HIM SELF POE

  3 5

  the flare of your torch and in the light of your fire, a company

  of ill-boding spirits have gathered. In their center three

  Demons of the Darkness. They are dancing. It is the Death-

  Dance. They stop. And now they are, each in turn, whisper-

  ing to me. But you can neither hear nor see them. As they

  whisper to me I will repeat the words to you.”

  Bending forward in the attitude of an eager listener, and

  as if straining to catch the words of some one whispering, Poe

  slowly uttered the strange sentences of his wild story. The

  deception—if deception it was—was indeed most perfect.

  Each one of our number was ready to believe that Poe was

  actually hearing and repeating words spoken to him by some

  invisible person. The action was so wonderfully natural

  that it created the most absorbing effect. For a brief while

  I could scarcely believe my own identity. It was, in truth,

  some time before I could rid myself of the impression that

  Poe was in actual and direct communication with evil spirits.

  Tucker afterwards told me that several members of the

  party—otherwise sensible fellows—were never able entirely

  to rid themselves of this impression. H 1 4 9 3 9 1 2

  It is useless to even attem pt a reproduction of that story.

  The bare outline—at best feeble—is all that I dare trust myself

  to give. Those three Demons are supposed to be the nar-

  rators using Poe as a mouthpiece. Consequently the story is

  divided into three parts.

  I

  Two young men start out in life together. They have been

  unto one another more like brothers than like friends. Their

  hearts are drawn together by the tenderest ties that can bind

  two unselfish souls. Manhood finds them living a peaceful,

  harmonious life. Thus far without the shadows. But a curse

  yet unfulfilled hangs over them—some iniquity of the fathers

  that must be visited on the children of the third and fourth

  generation.

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  THE M AN WHO CALLED HIM SELF POE

  Discord, and then the horrors of civil war invade the

  peaceful land. The execution of the curse is near. There is

  a great issue at stake, and those young men differ about the

  merits of the cause. It is their first difference. They go on

  the battle-field and on opposite sides. In an evil hour, in the

  bitterness of a hand-to-hand conflict, they meet, each un-

  known to the other. Their weapons cross, a deadly thrust,

  and one lies dying. Then the cruel agony of a too-late recog-

  nition. While the dying man breathes away his life, young,

  and so like a flower, on the bosom of his comrade, full of

  wretchedness, a voice:—'“Your soul has expiated the curse

  of your race; peace abide with you.” He is dead. But other

  voices, harsh and penetrating, ring out upon the ear of the

  grief-stricken survivor, ״Your curse has barely begun its bale-

  ful course; you are to go about the world a homeless, friend-

  less wanderer; and when the end does come, you are to lie

  in a grave forever nameless.”

  II

  A storm. Night falls about, drawn on before its time. Out

  of the darkness of a distant valley a man full of years toils

  up the mountain side. But a human shadow. He trembles

  with fatigue and fright. The storm sweeps along the moun-

  tain. He seeks protection from its raging, unpent fury be-

  neath the branches of a wide-spreading hemlock. It is where

  you are seated to-night. Years hence will mark his coming

  to this lonely dell in the heart of the Ragged Mountains.

  The shadows will steal away his power of action, and the

  shadows will close in and around about him, and from this

  spot he will not again depart.

  III

  This human shadow, shut in by a troop of Demon-sent

  shadows, labors day by day at some mysterious task. Never

  man worked at so strange a labor. It is the slow making of a

  THE M AN WHO CALLED HIM SELF POE

  3 7

  grave—and his own. Day after day the work goes on. Then

  there comes a pause. His labors are ended. And there, at the

  foot of a beautiful bed of lilies, an open grave. And now he

  sleeps in that grave, made by the painful toil of his weak and

  shriveled hands.

  And Edgar Allan Poe, in conclusion, “The fitfulness of

  his fife goes out into a perpetual darkness. The Angel of

  Death forever calms the trouble heart. And in those days

  when my three now powerful Demons shall have lost their

  high and most evil estate, an
d when other and better

  spirits shall have gathered here to hold high carnival in their

  stead, then the song of the midnight elfin shall be—

  ‘Over the lilies there that wave

  And weep above a nameless grave! ”

  His story was ended. Those last words were said in a

  whisper. Then there was a long and painful silence. Not a

  word, not a movement, only the crackling sound of pine

  fagots almost burned out. We made effort to shake off the

  gloom settling down upon us. It was useless. Then we were

  startled to our feet by the sound of a retreating footfall. It

  came from the tangled mountain growth that enclosed our

  open space around the camp-fire.

  Poe, with a wild expression on his face, lighted by the

  glare of the torch and fire, stood erect in our midst. With

  a mocking laugh that chilled every heart, he made this cry:

  —“Be still, my brave comrades; it is only the retreating foot-

  fall of my last Demon. He is gone! Come, scatter the dying

  embers. Bid farewell to our safe retreat. Now let us go, and

  in peace, down the mountain side, and again return to the

  University.״

  It is indeed a mystery how, on that night, we reached our

  deserted rooms; for it was the darkest night that I have ever

  known. And our souls too were filled with the darkness—a

  troop of grim terrors. Present in every mind the picture of

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  THE M AN WHO CALLED HIM SELF POE

  that nameless grave. It was a picture with a ghoulish back-

  ground of human Shadows and Death-Dancing Demons.

  Now this which I have told is the bare outline—an in-

  complete synopsis—of that strange tale. It would take the

  touch of a master hand to render full justice to a story told

  by that master spirit, Edgar Allan Poe.

  The days which followed thereafter almost drifted us into

  the belief that we had somewhere and somehow dreamed

  away the period of our hiding in the Ragged Mountains—a

  delicious slumber ruffled by the shadowy presence of a whis-

  pering phantom and a nameless grave—yet to be—far up in

  the wooded heart of that spur of the Blue Ridge.

  The following December ended my term and my stay at

  the Virginia University. Poe left at the same time. Our lines

  of life stretched out in directions widely different, and they

  never crossed again. Our old friendship was never renewed.

  But our parting that December night was exceeding sad,

  full of tenderness and—pardon the weakness, for we

  were hardly more than boys—tears, hot, impulsive tears of

  deep regret. “I will never see you again,״ he said. His words

  were indeed prophetic. And perhaps it was better so, yet—

  But no; I will leave untold that which would only gratify

  an idle curiosity and open to public gaze an unsuspected

  heart-wound.

  There is a sequel to that story of the nameless grave, as

  it was told to us by the boy Poe on that spring-time night

  in The Valley of Unrest.

  About five years ago, after a long period of wandering in

  many strange and out-of-the-way places, I found myself in

  an old Italian town. There was a charm about the place. It

  was ancient, crude and interesting. To gratify an idle fancy—

  a mere whim—I had taken for the winter an old Ducal Pal-

  ace, long ago given over to the chance tenant and—ruin.

  There came a holiday; then a night of the Carnival. I

  stood on the carved stone balcony of my own Ducal Palace

  and watched the motley throng passing down the crowded

  THE M AN WHO CALLED HIMSELF POE

  3 9

  street. They pelted me where I stood, and laughed to see a

  face so full of sober thought in so gay a time.

  Something—perhaps the odor of some flower, or, as it was

  to-night, the sound of some voice, rich, suggestive—something

  brought the desire to come back again to this, my native

  land. It had been for me the scene of much unhappiness,

  but a new generation of haste-lovers had risen, and I thought

  to go again to the home of my fathers. Vacant all the rest of

  that winter was my Ducal Palace. And the people said that

  I was driven out by the ill-resting spirit of some Duke foully

  murdered in the long ago. So I left that uneasy shade in the

  full possession of that Ducal Palace, rich in tarnished gild-

  ings and faded colorings.

  On my return, familiar places claimed my attention. Many

  of those whom I had known and loved were dead, and many

  changes marked the town of my birth. I turned from them

  all. I was disappointed. Only one place had not changed.

  Only one of those old places satisfied me. It was the Uni-

  versity of Virginia. There everything seemed the same. True,

  a new set of Professors filled the chairs of those whom I

  had known, and men with unfamiliar faces frequented

  Rotunda, Porch, Arcade, and Lawn. Yet the place itself—its

  walls and its groves consecrated to knowlege—was just as

  I had left it.

  One thought absorbed my attention. It was a foolish no-

  tion that would not down, and was yet ill-defined. Perhaps,

  by a mere accident, some one might have been buried in

  The Valley of Unrest and in a nameless grave. So it was,

  filled with this almost belief, that I determined to go and

  see for myself.

  But to find that lonely dell far up in the wooded heart of

  the Ragged Mountains was not an easy task.

  While a student I had often rambled over the University

  Range of Mountains. I had often gathered flowers and ferns

  from the scattered ruins of the old observatory.* I had often

  * Now a new and beautiful Observatory stands on the old site.

  4 0

  THE M A N WHO CALLED HIM SELF POE

  stood on the summit of Lewis Mountain and looked down

  upon the Pantheon-modeled Dome of the old Rotunda. I

  had often watched the afternoon sunlight slowly creeping

  beneath the Arcades of Range and Lawn. And I had often

  looked down upon the town of Charlottesville, with glitter-

  ing spire and gleaming roof, softened into a suggestion of

  something picturesque by distance and sunshine. But I had

  never but that once—those three days of hiding—explored

  the Ragged Mountains. From the time that I first saw them

  looking then as they always did, the embodiment of dense

  and somber loneliness, they had for me a charm. This charm

  was enhanced by our self-imposed banishment and the tale

  told by Edgar Allan Poe on that spring-time night beneath

  the shadows of those low-sweeping pines and in the glare of

  torch and camp-fire.

  That memory, after all of those years, had brought me

  again within the reach of The Valley of Unrest.

  It was the spring-time. And it was early one bright morn-

  ing when I started up the mountain-side to find again that

  beautiful dell. But in vain I wandered up and down the

  length and breadth of the Ragged Mountains. The old path

  was overgrown and forgotten. I was wearied with much and

  fruitless search
ing. I stretched out beneath a huge pine,

  on a bed of dry moss, and closed my eyes, but not in

  slumber. A bunch of new-blown lilies growing on a nameless

  grave was my one and troubled thought. It was about the

  hour of noon. Suddenly I grew conscious that some one was

  near, looking down into my face, studying its features. It was

  that peculiar and unmistakable feeling of a nearness to a

  human being. Out of mere perverseness I remained still and

  as if asleep. My ear, on the alert for the slightest sound,

  caught the better part of these sentences: “Yes, yes, I am

  sure he is one of their number. True, he is greatly changed;

  but in spite of his long white hair and his heavily bearded

  face, I know him.״

  Breaking away from the capricious control of that per­

  THE M AN WHO CALLED HIMSELF POE

  41

  verse spirit, I arose and stood before a man as old, if not

  older than myself. He was a tall, angular, raw-boned moun-

  taineer. His manner was calm, collected. His eye was bright

  and full of the fires of life, not yet burned out by the hoary

  encroachments of many years.

  “Stranger,” said he, in a voice somewhat low, and full of

  earnestness, “I have seen you before. But you have never seen

  me. You were about these parts now nigh on to fifty years

  ago. You were with a crowd of students from the Univer-

  sity who came hither to hide from the county sheriff. Now

  come, stranger, and behold the fulfillment of a strange pre-

  diction that you and I and all the rest of us heard on the

  third and last night of your stay in the Ragged Mountains.”

  I

  had no answer. I was full of ill-concealed wonder. In

  silence I followed the man who had just spoken. We pene-

  trated deep into the dense gloom of the forest. We neared

  an open spot. It was a lonely dell, and I was sure that once

  again, after all the years, I stood within the shadows of that

  Valley of Unrest.

  Instantly came to mind those words placed in the mouth

  of Bedloe, in Edgar Allan Poes “Tale of the Ragged Moun-

  tains”: “The scenery which presented itself on all sides had

  about it an indescribable and to me a delicious aspect of

  dreary desolation. The solitude seemed absolutely virgin. I

  could not help believing that the green sods and the gray

 

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