History is written by the victors. Or, the one who dies last.
Such was the case for Edgar Allan Poe, whose nemesis, Rufus Griswold, became his literary executor and wrote a slanderous biography after Poe’s untimely and mysterious death.
Now Richmond’s Poe Museum is raising money to acquire a collection of Griswold’s papers from an antiques dealer. The assortment of about 45 letters, manuscripts, and paintings will make the museum the largest collection of Griswold’s personal items.
“[The dealer] got it from descendants of Griswold, and we have the opportunity to make it available to everybody,” says Chris Semtner, curator of the museum. “It will go a long ways to helping us separate facts from fiction.”
The online fundraiser is up to $1,300 of its $5,000 goal as of this writing.
You’d be forgiven for never having heard of Griswold, but he was a respected anthologist, editor, and critic in his time. His 1842 collection, “The Poets and Poetry of America,” had to be reprinted three times in its first six months of publication.
That may have been the beginning of his and Poe’s enmity. “He collected poems from all the major ones, but he only published three of Poe’s,” says Semtner. “Edgar was a little offended.”
Semtner says that many of the featured poets have not stood the test of time. “One of things he did in his anthology is he focused mostly on New England poets. Poe wanted to stand up for Virginia and southern writers, challenge the authority of the great northern writers.”
Poe expressed his dissatisfaction in a mature and gracious manner. “He wrote reviews making fun of Griswold’s book, did a lecture tour making fun of Griswold’s book. He made a career of making fun of Griswold,” Semtner says. “In one Poe story, a character gets stupider reading one of Griswold’s books.”
When Poe died suddenly at the age of 40, his destitute mother-in-law, perhaps not knowing of the hostility, signed away the rights to Poe’s work to Griswold.
She must not have read Griswold’s obituary of Poe, which infamously began:
Edgar Allan Poe is dead. He died in Baltimore the day before yesterday. This announcement will startle many, but few will be grieved by it.
When he anthologized Poe’s work, Griswold included a biography that portrayed Poe as a drunkard, a deserter, a derelict.
“He fabricated stories, made [Poe] out to be a horrible, despicable, hated person. We’ve all heard these stories of Poe being a drug-addled madman,” tells Semtner.
Griswold’s plan backfired, of course, and America became enamored of the bad boy poet whose ability to build suspense and weave a sordid plot seemed to mirror the lifestyle Griswold invented for him. (Griswold, meet America.)
“To this day, teachers in school will call [Poe] a drunkard. But, if he had been drinking, he couldn’t get any writing done. He wasn’t a morbid fellow who hung out in graveyards, he was very social.”
Semtner says the museum plans to have an exhibit about Griswold, the feud, and how it contributed to public understanding of Poe.
“If you thought Poe was morbid, Griswold is more so. When his wife died, he refused to leave her side for days. When she was finally buried in crypt, he went to sleep next to her there, woke up ‘damp with the death dews,’” Semtner says, quoting a letter Griswold wrote about his grief. “He was almost like a real-life Poe poem come to life.”
The effects of that dewy, devoted man will now reside at the museum of the man whose image he attempted to trash.
“I think it’s a way to help rehabilitate Poe. I don’t know what Griswold would think of being in Poe’s museum, but he’s really only remembered for being the guy who defamed Poe’s reputation,” Semtner says.
“Not a lot of people liked Griswold,” he adds.
To the victor, the spoils.