It will not be readily believed by anyone acquainted with the name Rufus Griswold (and the slurs and slanders that frequently preface or append it) that I have been honored with the Very Inspiring Blogger award, the title of which justifies an expectation on the part of its recipient that he, in the first place, inspires, and in the second actively maintains a blog. I will let those who have found their way to these pages judge for themselves what inspiration may be found within, and will have to hope that having two very occasional blogs is as good as having one blog humming with activity. This distinction has been bestowed upon me by the generous and tolerant Undine, author of the indispensable World of Poe blog and, as devotees of Edgar Allan Poe are concerned, one of the good
ones. Her deftly told and illuminating
writings chronicling the life and shattering the myths of the wretch Poe’s
troubled existence never fail to fill me with a strange, sometimes bitter
nostalgia that I cherish.
Accepting the award
obliges me to divulge seven indiscriminate facts about myself, as well as to
recognize the efforts of seven other bloggers.
I’ll not pretend that I am reluctant to share morsels of Griswoldia with
you people; neither will I conceal the truth that I do not actually regularly frequent
a great many blogs (I would certainly confer the award unto Undine had she not
before now been so acknowledged, but as she nominated me I would be reluctant
to do so lest the whiff of puffery pervade the blogosphere). I am certain, however, that I can come up
with some other bloggers of note if I search the misty recesses of my memory
adequately. There is one thing, however,
that will likely render somewhat abortive any nominations I choose to make; the
fact that fewer people read my blogs than were in attendance at Poe’s funeral.
I begin with the blogs of my choosing, in no order whatsoever...
FOUR
Only for the articles (wink wink), I present the BiblioBabes, which combines two of my favorite things...And books!
http://www.bibliobabes.ca/
I begin with the blogs of my choosing, in no order whatsoever...
ONE
Rob Velella is the blogger responsible for both The Poe
Calendar blog and The American Literary blog.
The former, detailing episodes in the life of the vile Edgar Allan Poe,
is far better than its subject deserves.
http://poecalendar.blogspot.com/
http://numbersixwasinnocent.blogspot.com/
TWO
Lovers of classic old time radio shows will enjoy the Times
Past Old Time Radio blog, with a seemingly endless supply of shows in the
public domain available for download.
http://otrarchive.blogspot.com/
THREE
Do you want information?
Fans of “The Prisoner” will no doubt learn much from Moor Larkin who
runs the Number Six Was Innocent blog, freeing Patrick McGoohan’s television
masterpiece from the cult-myths that have been spawned by fans over the years.
FOUR
Only for the articles (wink wink), I present the BiblioBabes, which combines two of my favorite things...And books!
http://www.bibliobabes.ca/
FIVE
For a plethora of genuine correspondence on just about any topic you seek check out Letters of Note, maintained by Shaun Usher.
http://www.lettersofnote.com/
SIX
While this is not strictly a blog, it is amazing and hilarious. Real Garfield strips with the eponymous feline lovingly removed from each panel to reveal Jon Arbuckle’s descent into madness one day at a time.
For a plethora of genuine correspondence on just about any topic you seek check out Letters of Note, maintained by Shaun Usher.
http://www.lettersofnote.com/
SIX
While this is not strictly a blog, it is amazing and hilarious. Real Garfield strips with the eponymous feline lovingly removed from each panel to reveal Jon Arbuckle’s descent into madness one day at a time.
http://garfieldminusgarfield.net/
That is all I have.
And now, with no further delay, here are seven miscellaneous
details about myself…
ONE
“Mayonnaise:
One of the sauces which serve the French in place of a state religion.” –
Ambrose Bierce, Cynic
I find mayonnaise to be the most detestable food stuff ever
to be invented by man. It is the Edgar
Allan Poe of condiments as far as I am concerned. To so much as open a jar of that vile
substance in the same room where you are preparing a sandwich that I am meant
to eat is to announce that our relationship is at an end. If you were to spit in my lunch you would not
witness a more horrified reaction from me than if even a single gob of
mayonnaise were to come into contact with it.
I attribute two different reasons for my hatred of the white poison:
First and foremost, it is offensive to every one of the five senses (yes, it even sounds disgusting). The
second reason is perhaps the result of my youthful gullibility. When I was seven my brother Randolph, nine
years my senior, told me of a predawn encounter he had had with the ‘mayonnaise
man’ when he was a child. He described a
malformed figure in stained and tattered apparel descending from a horse-drawn
cart that carried a number of empty jars, one of which the grunting figure
removed from the cart and carried nearer the front door of our childhood
home. Once there he opened his rags to
reveal the festering sores that overlay him like a second garment, weeping with
purulence, and removed the lid from the jar.
He then began slowly, deliberately kneading his wounds, beginning at the
forehead and working systematically downward, to harvest the white translucent
fluid. Twenty minutes passed as Randolph
watched in revulsion until the jar was more or less filled to capacity and its
lid replaced to seal in the goodness.
TWO
“I may say I know [Dr. Griswold's] general character for
veracity; and have known it since 1848; it is very bad…his boasts of ladies’
favor and correspondence…” - Elizabeth F. Ellet, Cunt
“How the women have
affected your condition it irks me to know.
They handle all of us hardly enough, but God! when they get hold of a
chap of your poetic temperament they use him up completely—at least for a
while.”- Charles Fenno Hoffman, Madman
By the time I died in 1857 I had amassed a library of 3280
items and had read every American poem published prior to 1850. One would think that poetry was my obsession,
but it was a means to an end. A rear
end. A great many of them. I had more hot women than irredeemable dissipate Edgar Allan Poe had
hot meals. From barely legal beauties to
brainy bookish bluestockings my familiarity with the poetry of our land and my
influence within literary circles and publishing houses, to say nothing of my
natural charm and charisma, made both my social and professional life abound with
the amorous attentions of lusty literary ladies.
Nothing moistens the underthings of a young poetess like the prospect of
publication, and though their poetry be long forgotten, their cries of ecstasy
will echo always in my memory. I have
been queried as to precisely how many woman I have taken to bed, but a
gentleman does not satisfy such puerile and tactless curiosity; though I will
say that a quick look at the table of contents of my volume of vulvic verse, “The
Female Poets of America”, would provide one with a very conservative
estimate. Alas, these days my romantic
exploits are limited to abusing Mr. Longfellow or, in polite company, making
the beast with one back.
THREE
"And now for something completely different."
"Comedy always works best when it is mean-spirited." - John Cleese, Tall Person
The rise and progress of the British television comedy form one of the most delightful and instructive chapters in the history of the medium. I am a huge devotee and have amassed quite an impressive DVD collection comprised of programs from the early 1960’s through the present. My particular favorites include Steptoe & Son, Monty Python’s Flying Circus, Fawlty Towers, The Young Ones, Blackadder, Absolutely Fabulous, Red Dwarf, The Office, Peep Show, Gavin & Stacey, Hyperdrive and Saxondale.
FOUR
“But here any
foreigner’s literary property is every body’s, and the evil is not utterly
unmixed; for it has enabled Mr. Griswold to compile a very acceptable volume of
[Thomas Haynes] Bayly’s Poems.” – The N.Y. Tribune
"He takes
advantage of a state of things which he declares to be 'immoral, unjust and
wicked,' and even while haranguing the loudest, is purloining the
fastest." - Joel T. Headley, Ass
People have referred to me as a ‘literary pirate’, a term I do not care for. Captain Flint was a literary
pirate. I merely engaged in the printing
of previously published, usually foreign works in my capacity as anthologist
and editor of various literary journals.
There existed no international copyright law in my day, though I was a
vociferous proponent of such legislation, and in the spring of 1844 I was
selected by the American Copyright Club to petition Congress for that very
purpose. My efforts were so efficacious
that two score and seven years later the International Copyright Act of 1891,
or Chase Act, was passed. I had hoped to
see international copyright become a reality prior to my passing, but this was
not to be. I rest in peace regardless,
secure in the knowledge that the lack of such legislation during my tenure on
Earth helped to keep that contemptible swine Edgar Allan Poe in a state of
perpetual poverty and under my heel.
FIVE
“Sir, I may not have
been always a Christian, but I am very sure that I have been a gentleman.” - Rufus Wilmot Griswold, Tastemaker
It may surprise many to learn that I am an atheist. My mother was an extremely pious woman, and in
my youth I became well acquainted with the bible. I left home at the age of 15 a true believer,
and in my early twenties I decided that I might pursue a theological
profession. By the close of 1837 I was
licensed to preach, “a member and clergyman of the Baptist Church, in good
standing”, and in early 1842 I received from that distinguished and most
estimable pastor, the Rev. A. D. Gillette of the Eleventh Baptist Church in
Philadelphia, the title of “Reverend”.
In the autumn of 1844 Shurtleff [Baptist] College conferred upon me the
degree of ‘Doctor of Divinity’; I was “the Reverend Dr. Griswold”. It was not long afterward, however, that my
belief in God began to deteriorate. When
my beautiful young wife Caroline perished before her time along with my infant
son, the God of my younger days took on a more malevolent aspect. I would continue to supplement my income as a
pulpitarian, and the titles I bore, though they had in my judgement grown hollow,
added a weight of credibility to my endeavors; but the spirit no longer moved
me. I became acquainted with sin and the
Lord’s presence began to diminish within me.
But it wasn’t until I truly knew the wretch Edgar Allan Poe that my faith was
utterly obliterated. Surely no sane or
just deity would have endowed a degenerate animal such as he with the preternatural
literary gifts that he exhibited throughout his miserable existence.
SIX
“No more—no more of
song to-night;
Oh, let no more thy music flow!
Those notes that once could wake delight,
Come o'er me like a spirit-blight,
A breathing of the faded past,
Whose freshest hopes to earth were cast
Long, long ago.” – Charles Fenno Hoffman, Madman
Oh, let no more thy music flow!
Those notes that once could wake delight,
Come o'er me like a spirit-blight,
A breathing of the faded past,
Whose freshest hopes to earth were cast
Long, long ago.” – Charles Fenno Hoffman, Madman
This may be my favorite audio recording:
SEVEN
“Not long ago, the writer of these lines,
In the mad pride of intellectuality,
Maintained "the power of words"-denied that ever
A thought arose within the human brain
Beyond the utterance of the human tongue”- Edgar Allan Poe, Poet Inebriate
In the mad pride of intellectuality,
Maintained "the power of words"-denied that ever
A thought arose within the human brain
Beyond the utterance of the human tongue”- Edgar Allan Poe, Poet Inebriate
I hate Edgar Allan Poe. I
hate him with a hate that is more than hate, more that I can even begin to
adequately articulate. My loathing for Poe
exists independently of any envy on my part regarding his literary achievements
or bitterness concerning his flirtations with Fanny Osgood. It is not the result of a difference of
opinion as to our respective estimations of other literary men, nor a defensive
posture assumed in response to the thousand injuries of Poe I had borne. It is a
biological, instinctive revulsion felt by every cell in my body, and I am its
servant. It has cast a long shadow over
both my life and death…and my soul from out that shadow shall be
lifted-nevermore!
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