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The day that marks Edgar Allan Poe’s 200th anniversary is that of 19th of January 2009. Even after all these years, the poet still has the power to impress throughout his work and sad, short life, not to mention his mysterious death which sustain his legend. His tales of gothic horror and grisly murder remain engraved on the imagination once read.
He became the master of the macabre while being a man who endured more sufferance during his lifetime than a single person should. His share of misery reflects in his poems that reverberate throughout popular culture to this day.
It does not matter how readers are introduced to Poe’s work, it has the same thrilling, scary effect. You may find him in English classes, comic books or filmed performances;
Films have been adapted from both his life and work in every decade since the 1900s. Universal Pictures made a series of Poe adaptations in the 1930s starring horror actors Bela Lugosi and Boris Karloff. In the 1960s, Poe tales were adapted into six movies, with a series of twisted, tormented Poe protagonists.
To mark his anniversary, a mysterious man wearing a hat visits his tomb in Baltimore every year in the early morning darkness to bring him red roses and a half-filled bottle of cognac. It is said that about 50 people waited on Monday outside the cemetery of Westminster Presbyterian Church, hoping to catch a glimpse of the elusive man known as the "Poe toaster," but somehow, the man manages to fade away from curious eyes.
Edgar Allan Poe was born in Boston on the 19th of January 1809 and died at 40 in Baltimore on the 7th of October 1849 leaving behind a work of genius. Thanks to that, literature would never be the same again.
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