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The Beautiful Cigar Girl

Page 37

by Daniel Stashower


  on abortion theory, 253–54, 260

  coverage of Jewett’s murder, 117–21

  and crime reporting, 115–16, 120–21

  journalistic hoaxes, 26, 305–6

  and law enforcement, 108–9

  and “Marie Rogêt” mystery, 266–67, 270, 273, 279

  on Merritt, 211

  and Payne, 106–7, 205–6

  restraint requested from, 195, 199

  on Rogers’s allure, 19

  role of, 86, 115–16

  and rumors, 181–82

  skirmishing among, 155

  on suspects, 161–63, 174

  theories of, 237, 254–55

  yellow journalism, 5, 110–11, 120–21

  prostitution, 66–67

  P. T. Barnum’s American Museum, 14–15

  publications of Poe. See also specific titles

  essays, 328

  journal, 130, 131, 223, 244, 263, 264, 291, 298, 299, 324–25

  literary criticism, 36–37, 80, 128, 132–33

  and Maria Clemm, 74

  novellas, 128

  poetry, 50, 53–54, 57–58, 73, 311–13

  posthumous two-volume edition, 336–37

  short stories, 74–75, 128–29, 133–41, 219, 299–300, 309–10, 315

  in youth, 45

  Purdy, Elijah, 102, 103, 152

  “Purloined Letter, The” (Poe), 309–10, 315, 351

  Putnam, George, 330

  Pym, A. G. (pseudonym), 125

  ratiocination

  and chess-playing automaton, 69–73

  in “Marie Rogêt” mystery, 7, 9, 225–26, 284–87, 353

  in “Purloined Letter, The,” 310

  “Raven, The” (Poe), 311–13, 315, 323

  Raven and Other Poems, The (Poe), 311–13

  reforms resulting from Rogers’s murder, 4–5, 341–43, 347

  Restell (Ann Trow Lohman), 250–53, 262, 298, 343–45, 346–47

  Richmond, Annie, 331–32

  Richmond, Virginia, 76–77, 79, 83, 332

  Roberts, George, 228–29

  Robinson, Richard, 117, 119, 148

  Rogers, Daniel, 21–22

  Rogers, Mary Cecilia

  allure of, 23–24

  at Anderson’s Tobacco Emporium, 3–4, 17–19

  attention received by, 27–28, 29–30

  background, 17, 20

  birth, 22

  body of, 90–91 (see also murder investigation)

  celebrity of, 18–19, 341

  demeanor of, 19–20, 144

  depicted in Ingraham’s Beautiful Cigar Girl, 308–9

  depicted in “Marie Rogêt,” 232–33, 273–75, 288 (see also “Mystery of Marie Rogêt, The”)

  disappearance of (1838), 24–27, 60, 273, 275–78, 360, 364

  disappearance of (1841), 59–68 (see also murder investigation)

  funeral, 186, 189

  and Poe, 38, 58

  poetry dedicated to, 17, 18, 24, 32, 347

  prose dedicated to, 32, 347

  reports of her being alive, 181 (see also survival of Rogers)

  social status of, 278

  suitors of, 26–27, 29–32, 61, 161, 273, 274, 275–78

  Rogers, Phoebe

  background, 20–23

  and Crommelin, 30, 191

  at the Dead House, 101

  on disappearance of Mary (1838), 24–25

  on disappearance of Mary (1841), 63, 64, 65, 68, 256–57

  identification of body, 102, 105–6

  identification of clothing, 189–90

  in “Marie Rogêt” mystery, 233

  on Mary’s employment, 17

  and Payne, 31–32, 60–61, 107, 258, 358–59

  response to discovery of body, 99, 100, 186, 187–88, 256–67

  Royster, Sarah Elmira, 43–44, 47, 50, 332–33

  rumors, 110, 181–82, 191–92, 205–6

  sailor’s knot in bonnet, 96, 158, 277, 278

  Sands, Gulielma, 144

  Saturday Evening Post, 225

  Saturday Museum, 298

  Scott, Winfield, 15

  self-immolation, 323

  sensationalism, 5, 110–11, 120–21

  Seward, William, 155–56, 182, 212, 356

  Shakespeare Tavern, 38

  Sharp, Solomon P., 79

  Shew, Marie, 331

  Simms, William Gilmore, 80, 224, 226

  Sins of New York (Every), 345

  Smith, Matthew Hale, 14, 342

  Snodgrass, Joseph Evans

  and death of Poe, 334

  on funeral for Poe, 335

  and “Marie Rogêt” mystery, 3–4, 6–7, 8, 226, 228–29

  Snowden, William, 229–30, 243–44, 289, 292, 294

  “Solace Tobacco,” 15

  Southern Literary Messenger

  employment of Poe, 70, 76, 77

  fiction of Poe in, 80, 124

  literary criticism of Poe in, 36, 80, 263

  Poe’s departure from, 82–83, 126

  Spencer (naval officer), 356–57

  Stanard, Jane, 43, 313

  Stoneall, James, 152, 229

  strangulation of Rogers, 94, 95, 260–61, 358–59, 365

  Stylus, The

  and alcoholism of Poe, 264, 298, 299

  Poe’s goal of publishing, 223, 244, 263, 291

  prospectus, 298

  suicide hypothesis, 146–47

  Sunday Morning Atlas, 32

  Sunday News, 27

  Sunday Visiter, 74

  survival of Rogers

  as depicted in “Marie Rogêt,” 239, 240–41

  New York Planet on, 181

  Tattler on, 184–87, 190, 211, 213

  “Swarthy Man”

  and abortion theory, 254, 365

  as depicted in “Marie Rogêt,” 277, 354

  Loss on, 209, 212

  press on, 214–15

  Swinburne, Algernon Charles, 350

  Sybil’s Cave, 88, 144, 202

  Tale of a Physician (Davis), 348–49, 365–66

  Tales (Poe), 315–16, 321, 337, 345

  Tales of the Folio Club (Poe), 124

  Tales of the Grotesque and Arabesque (Poe), 129, 219

  Tamerlane and Other Poems (Poe), 50

  Tattler

  and Crommelin, 189–90

  as depicted in “Marie Rogêt,” 239, 240

  editor (see Day, Benjamin)

  and Hayes’s defense of family, 188–89

  on Payne’s suicide, 211–12

  on progress of investigation, 108

  on survival of Rogers, 184–87, 190, 211, 213

  on suspects, 161–63

  Taylor (justice of the peace)

  and Morse, 166, 168, 170, 173–78

  and Padley, 183

  and Payne’s suicide, 205

  “Tell-Tale Heart, The” (Poe), 315

  themes in Poe’s writing, 58

  Thomas, Frederick, 222, 264, 312

  Times and Commercial Intelligencer, 25, 26–27, 105–6, 276

  Times and Evening Star, 108

  Townsend, Rosina, 117, 118, 119–20

  Transcript, 155, 160–61

  “Turk, The,” 69–73, 224–25, 293–94

  U.S. Army, 49–52

  Van Buren, Martin, 115

  Vidocq (French detective), 140

  Walker, William, 96

  Wall, Adam, 200–201, 213

  Wallace, William Ross, 310–11

  Walling, George, 38, 104

  Warren, Robert Penn, 80

  Webb, James Watson, 113–14, 118, 152, 255

  Webster, Daniel, 116

  Weeks, Levi, 144

  Whip, 16

  White, Thomas Willis, 76, 77, 78, 79, 82–83, 124, 129

  Whitman, Sarah Helen, 331, 337, 357

  wife of Poe. See Poe, Virginia Clemm

  Wilde, Oscar, 350

  Wiley & Putnam, 315, 324

  Willis, Nathaniel, 307, 313, 329, 336

  women in Poe’s life, 7
–8, 313–14, 331 (see also Poe, Virginia Clemm)

  Woodberry, George, 350

  Woodhull, Caleb, 152

  Wyatt, Thomas, 125–26

  yellow journalism, 5, 110–11, 120–21

  ABOUT THE AUTHOR

  Daniel Stashower is the author of the highly acclaimed biography of Arthur Conan Doyle Teller of Tales (1999), which won the Edgar Award for Best Biographical Work. A winner of the Raymond Chandler Fulbright Fellowship in Detective and Crime Fiction writing, Stashower is also the author of several mystery novels. He lives with his family in Bethesda, Maryland.

  Visit the author’s website at www.stashower.com.

 

 

 


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