The Not so Suspicious Death of Edgar A. Poe

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Knowledge of Edgar Allan Poe is spread across decades and even centuries. Many have read his poems as a kid but, most do not know that the famous literary artist’s death was made a mystery like the ones he wrote about.The death of this renowned literary figure has caused much debate among historians, literary scholars, and medical doctors. This is due to the multiple possibilities for the cause of Edgar’s peculiar last days; many of which can be disproved. Though many theories have been made, a modernized medical perspective on this case gives answers that the others do not. On Poe’s business travels to New York City, from Richmond, Virginia he detoured to Baltimore. No one knows exactly why this happened, but many speculations have been drawn out. Edgar was found face down outside of a bar in a city that was not on his agenda. He was unconscious and taken to a nearby hospital and four days later pronounced dead by Dr. John J. Morgan, his attending physician. In the four days of his stay at the hospital, Poe slipped in and out of consciousness. Dr. Moran reported Edgar having tremors, sweating, hallucinations, delirium as in talking to walls, and cognitively impaired (Francis 168). These symptoms carried out until his death on October 7th, 1849. Most support goes to an alcohol related death. Even though other medical disorders, cooping, and conspiracy hold strong theories. Medical advances of the 20th century gave what is needed to uncover this mysterious death. Alcohol abuse was common during this time, but not much was known about the withdrawals and other illnesses relating to it. Withdrawals from alcohol and alcohol related diseases caused the eminent writer’s death, and it was not until advanced technology that this so call...

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...Alcohol Dehydrogenase Deficiency Syndrome solves the death of Edgar Allan Poe. Due to his binge drinking, these symptoms and withdrawals from alcohol took his life. The only thing suspicious about his death is the type of alcohol that caused it.

Works Cited
"Edgar Allan Poe Mystery." University of Maryland Medical Center. N.p., 24 Sept. 1996. Web. 18 Apr. 2014.

Francis, Roger A. "The Final Days Of Edgar Allan Poe: Clues To An Old Mystery Using 21St Century Medical Science." Omega: Journal Of Death & Dying 60.2 (2009): 165-173. Academic Search Complete. Web. 18 Apr. 2014.

Hopkins, Robert. "The Mysterious Disappearance And Death Of Edgar A. Poe." Southern Quarterly 44.4 (2007): 41-60. Academic Search Complete. Web. 18 Apr. 2014.

Walsh, John Evangelist. Midnight Dreary: The Mysterious Death of Edgar Allan Poe. New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers UP, 1998. Print.

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