Mystery visitor makes annual tribute to Poe
BALTIMORE – For the 58th straight year, a mysterious visitor left birthday cognac and roses at Edgar Allan Poe’s grave Friday, and he was watched by more onlookers than ever, a faithful viewer said.
Jeff Jerome, curator of the Poe House and Museum, said 55 people braved a chilly morning to glimpse the annual ritual of the mysterious visitor known as the Poe toaster.
“If I were the Poe toaster, and I saw and heard that crowd, I wouldn’t show up,” Jerome said before the ceremony.
As in years past, the visitor placed a half-empty bottle of cognac and three red roses at the grave on Poe’s birthday, Jerome said.
Once it realized who he was, the crowd rushed to one of the cemetery’s entrances to get a glimpse, and the toaster slipped out another way, Jerome said.
He said this year’s crowd was large but well-behaved, unlike last year when watchers tried to interfere with the tribute.
Jerome said he would no longer describe the visitor or what he was wearing because of last year’s unruly spectators.
One onlooker Friday dressed up to look like the Poe toaster had in a previous year, said Jerome, who has seen the mystery visitor every Jan. 19 since 1976.
Starting in 1949, a frail figure made the visit to Poe’s grave. In 1993, the original visitor left a cryptic note saying, “The torch will be passed.” A later note said the man, who apparently died in 1998, had handed the tradition on to his sons.
Poe, who wrote poems and horror stories such as “The Raven” and “The Tell-Tale Heart,” was born in Boston and raised in Richmond, Va. He died Oct. 7, 1849, in Baltimore at the age of 40 after collapsing in a tavern.