Abridged and adapted from "
Reclaiming Poe's Name":
I would like to make a simple proposal:
We should rename Poe.I suggest this for a couple of reasons. For one, the man often referred to as "Edgar Allan Poe" did not often use that name for himself. Most often, he was "
Edgar Poe" or "
Edgar A. Poe."
Remember, he was born
Edgar Poe (no middle name) in 1809. The Allan family never formerly adopted him and that middle "Allan" was never official. Keeping it doesn't make much sense, considering that Poe would not purposely honor John Allan today. As Daniel Hoffman wrote in his fantastic
Poe Poe Poe Poe Poe Poe Poe (1972): "If there is a villain in Poe's destiny, a malign person insinuated into his fortunes by the machinations of that evil fairy who always spoils the christening party, it may have been his nonadoptive guardian."
Even Silverman immortalized this fact by daring to title his book
Edgar A. Poe: A Mournful and Never-ending Remembrance - regardless of what you think of the book, the title is the most accurate one out there.
The name "Edgar Allan Poe" was so unusual during his lifetime, he had to actually explain what the "A." stood for in a letter
to a relative!I believe that the name "Edgar Allan Poe" was not cemented onto the collective tongue of the world until October 9, 1850, when Poe's most despised rival
Rufus Wilmot Griswold wrote: "
Edgar Allan Poe is dead." That's right, the name did not become popular until
after Poe's death
- and by his enemy. If we continue to call him by that three-letter name, Griswold has won.
As a Poeist myself, I also find the misspelling "Edgar
Allen Poe" the equivalent of nails on a chaulkboard. The number of reputable scholars, publishers, and claimed diehard Poe fans that have made this mistake is astounding. If nothing else, we should rename Poe to make it easier on them.
So, here is my proposal: Strike out "Edgar Allan Poe" and forever claim "
Edgar A. Poe." Will you join me in this cause?
-- Edited by Midnightdreary at 09:17, 2009-02-24 __________________