Examining Poe’s Death: How Edgar Allan Poe Died From Poisoning Ms. Dymek Table of Contents 1.

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Transcript Examining Poe’s Death: How Edgar Allan Poe Died From Poisoning Ms. Dymek Table of Contents 1.

Examining Poe’s Death:
How Edgar Allan Poe Died
From
Poisoning
Ms. Dymek
Table of Contents
1. Possibilities for Poison in Poe’s Time
2. Hair Sample Evidence
3. Mercury Poisoning
4. What is Carbon Monoxide Poisoning?
5. Carbon Monoxide Poisoning Evidence in Poe’s
Works
6. Possible Theory: Alcoholism
7. Possible Theory: Tuberculosis
8. Sources
Possibilities for Poison in Poe’s Time
Heavy metal poisoning was possible from:
 Drinking water
 Alcohol
 Food
 Cosmetics
 Medicines
 Gas lighting (Carbon Monoxide poisoning)
Hair Sample Evidence
 Lock of Poe’s hair was cut after his death in 1849 in
order for heavy metal analysis
 Poe’s 2.5’’ sample analyzes the 2-5 months of his life
 Hair tested for levels of:
 Arsenic
 Lead
 Mercury
 Nickel
 Uranium
• Lead levels fell
33%--shows
that Poe
reduced his
exposure
• Exposure could
be from wine or
medication
• Poe was an
alleged
drinker
• 3 to 4 times
today’s normal
level BUT not
enough to cause
symptoms of
lead poisoning
Nickel Levels
Lead Levels
Arsenic Level
• Poe’s hair
contained 15
times today’s
normal level
• 2/3 the level
associated with
symptoms of
arsenic
poisoning
H
A
E
• Levels were 10
times today’s I
V
normal
• Not enough toR
I
cause
symptoms of
D
nickel poisoning
S
E
A
N
M
C
P
E
L
E
Mercury Poisoning
• Poe’s levels increased by 264% over several
months towards the end of his life
• Poe was taking calomel
• Also known as Mercury Chloride (popular from
1830-1860)
• Used as a laxative, diuretic, and disinfectant
• Also used as a horticultural fungicide
• Still more than 30 times below level associated
with mercury poisoning
What is Carbon Monoxide
Poisoning?
Popular during 1800s due
to gas lanterns, burning
wood and charcoal
stoves being used
Symptoms include:
 Nausea
 Vomiting
 Chest Pain
 Weakness
 Confusion
Poe’s drooping eye and mouth  Facial Paralysis
(drooping)
are “tell-tale signs” of CO2
exposure and poisoning.
Carbon Monoxide Poisoning
Evidence in Poe’s Works
“The Tell-Tale Heart”
 "And have I not told you that what you mistake for
madness is but overacuteness of the senses?”
“The Premature Burial”
 “In this condition, without pain, without ability to stir, or
strictly speaking, to think, but with a dull lethargic
consciousness of life… until the crisis of the disease
restored me... “
 “I grew sick, and numb, and chilly, and dizzy, and so fell
prostrate at once."
Carbon Monoxide Poisoning
Evidence in Poe’s Works
“The Fall of the House of Usher”
 "struggled to reason off the
nervousness which had dominion
There are over 30 quotes
over me"
from just this story that
correspond directly with
 "irrepressible tremor gradually the
CO poisoning theory!
pervaded my frame"
 "there were but peculiar sounds, and
these from stringed instruments,
which did not inspire him with
horror”
Possible Theory: Alcoholism
 Alcoholism ran in Poe’s family
 Father and brother both alcoholics
 Poe’s Public Drinking
 Records of drinking came from “literary enemies”
 Came to office intoxicated in April 1845
 July 7, 1849: Wrote letter to Maria Clemm about jail
time
Poe drank mostly because
depression brought on by of
Virginia’s death
Possible Theory: Alcoholism
 Went to Sons of Temperance meeting a month
before his death
 “Poe’s flirtation with alcohol was intermittent”
 “a few days of drinking followed by months or even
years of abstinence”
 Poe’s 1841 letter to Snodgrass admits single
deviation, showing Poe’s honesty
http://www.eapoe.org/geninfo/poethair.htm
Possible Theory: Alcoholism
April 1841 Letter to J.E. Snodgrass
 “. . . I am temperate even to rigor. . . . At no period of
my life was I ever what men call intemperate. . . .
 For some days after each excess I was invariably
confined to bed.
 But it is now quite four years since I have abandoned
every kind of alcoholic drink — four years, with the
exception of a single deviation . . . when I was induced
to resort to the occasional use of cider, with the hope
of relieving a nervous attack”
For more information about Poe and alcoholism, click here.
Possible Theory: Tuberculosis
 Extremely contagious bacterial infection
 Spreads mostly through lungs, lymph node, blood
stream
 Many in Poe’s family died from Tuberculosis
 Virginia contracted TB in 1842—died in 1847
 Many who are exposed never develop symptoms
 TB can lay dormant for years in a person’s body
 Disease will not spread unless it becomes “active”
Possible Theory: Tuberculosis







Tuberculosis Symptoms
Immediately Present Prior to
Death
Chills
Fever
Night sweats
Poor appetite
At The Time of His Death:
in and out of consciousness
Speech was incoherent
Called out for an unknown
person named “Reynolds”




CO Poisoning
Persistent Headaches
Confusion
Memory Loss
Loss of Consciousness
Poe’s symptoms that were
present at his death
coincided more with
Carbon Monoxide
Poisoning than with
Tuberculosis.
Edgar Allan Poe
Carbon Monoxide Poisoning
Poe’s Alcoholism and
Tuberculosis
For more information…
Click on the following links if
you would like to know
more about:
Sources
Donnay, Albert. ”A Edgar Allan Poe and The Tell-Tale Face of Carbon Monoxide Poisoning." POE: The Tell-Tale Face of Carbon Monoxide
Poisoning. Multiple Chemical Sensitivity Referral and Resources, 2006. Web. 07 Mar. 2013. <http://www.mcsrr.org/poe/>.
"E. A. Poe Society of Baltimore - Poe's Death." E. A. Poe Society of Baltimore - Poe's Death. Edgar Allan Poe Society of Baltimore, 1 May
1997. Web. 01 Mar. 2013. <http://www.eapoe.org/geninfo/poethair.htm>.
Hartshorn, W.S., and C.T. Tatman. Cropped Image from the Famous E.A. Poe Daguerrotype. 1848. Photograph. Wikipedia Commons. Web. 13
Mar. 2013. <http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File%3AEdgar_Allan_Poe_crop.jpg>.
Klimas, Anne, David Tauriello, Ben Graff, Mary Esselman, and John Sullivan. "MPT: Knowing Poe: Home." MPT: Knowing Poe: Home.
Maryland Public Television, 2002. Web. 01 Mar. 2013. http://knowingpoe.thinkport.org/default_flash.asp.
Poe, Edgar A. "The Fall of the House of Usher." 18 Best Short Stories by Edgar Allan Poe. New York: Dell, 1965. 21-40. Print.
Poe, Edgar A. ”The Premature Burial." 18 Best Short Stories by Edgar Allan Poe. New York: Dell, 1965. 58-72. Print.
Poe, Edgar A. ”The Tell-Tale Heart." 18 Best Short Stories by Edgar Allan Poe. New York: Dell, 1965. 138-143. Print.
PoeStories.com. Edgar Allan Poe. N.d. Photograph. PoeStories. 2005. Web. 7 Mar. 2013. <http://poestories.com/images/poe_portrait.jpg>.
Poe's Grave. N.d. Photograph. The Edgar Allan Poe Society of Baltimore, Baltimore. Pics4Learning. Www.eapoe.org. Web. 13 Mar. 2013.
http://pics.tech4learning.com/details.php?img=poesgrave.jpg.
”What Is Tuberculosis? Picture, Diagnosis, Causes." WebMD. Ed. Melinda Ratini, DO. WebMD, 25 Apr. 2012. Web. 07 Mar. 2013.
<http://www.webmd.com/lung/understanding-tuberculosis-basics>.
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