Edgar Allan Poe. The Bard of Baltimore.
You know him, and you know his work. Admit it: Back in high school, you couldn’t get enough of the guy. His whole haunted, hollow-eyed vibe perfectly matched your hormonal, moody, indoor-kid energy. He was goth before Dracula, he was emo before Philips.
You devoured his stuff, carefully tucking away his musty-dusty vocabulary words for that longed-for day when you could bust them out, all at once in a raging torrent, to show your bullies and detractors just how smart and dark and cool you were. You kept those words of his — words like fervid and miasma and inhume and surcease — on a low, steady boil inside your head, waiting. Waiting.
You thrilled to his tales of the macabre and mysterious, you pretended to understand all the Classical references in his poetry. He was the perfect companion throughout your teenage years; whenever you’d slam your bedroom door or performatively fling yourself across the furniture or let out one of your long, wet sighs of disaffection and self-pity, he was there to say, Yes, exactly, I get it, you’re special, you’re different, they don’t understand you and they never will.
And then you went away to college, and Poe, suddenly, wasn’t cool anymore.

9(MDAxOTAwOTE4MDEyMTkxMDAzNjczZDljZA004))

