The Virginian-Pilot
                            THE VIRGINIAN-PILOT  
              Copyright (c) 1997, Landmark Communications, Inc.

DATE: Monday, January 20, 1997              TAG: 9701200028
SECTION: FRONT                   PAGE: B6   EDITION: FINAL 
SOURCE: ASSOCIATED PRESS 
DATELINE: BALTIMORE                         LENGTH:   53 lines

A NEW STRANGER PAYS ANNUAL TRIBUTE AT THE GRAVE OF POE

He came upon a morning frigid. Six-foot-five and walking rigid.

Carrying on a ritual that has remained shrouded in mystery for 48 years, an unknown visitor placed a bottle of cognac and three red roses on the grave of poet Edgar Allan Poe at Westminster Church in Baltimore in the icy darkness at 4:45 a.m. Sunday, Poe's birthday.

This year's visitor captivated the 15 Poe aficionados who watched silently from the warmth of the church. The torch, passed two years ago to an apparently younger man, had been passed again, this time to a towering, lean giant, more daring and flamboyant than his predecessors.

``Seeing this dark figure coming down the street with his cloak flowing, the wide-brimmed dark hat, all black - I don't think I will ever forget what I saw last night,'' said Jeff Jerome, the Poe House curator, who has watched the ritual for 15 years. ``It was mesmerizing watching this guy,''

The stranger, dressed entirely in black, did not creep into the rear of the cemetery to the site of Poe's original grave. Instead, he strode up to the monument at the front of the church, where Poe was reburied in 1875, drank a long toast, then bent over and kissed the relief image of the poet carved into the monument.

Then, as quickly as he swept in, he left.

``This guy looked sinister, but when he went to the Poe monument it was just a tender and touching moment to see this dark, brooding figure do something so touching,'' Jerome said.

The three roses are thought to represent the poet, his wife, and her mother. All are buried in the tiny, brick-walled cemetery.

Poe, who was buried after he was found wandering deliriously through the streets of Baltimore, is best-known for his bleak tales of horror, such as ``The Raven,'' and ``The Telltale Heart.''

The identity of the visitor dressed in black topcoat and fedora has remained a riddle since the ritual began in 1949, a century after Poe died.

The aging visitor believed to be the original carried on the tradition until 1993, when he left a cryptic note saying, ``The torch will be passed.'' Then a younger man took up the task, apparently until this year.

A combination of wiliness and respect keeps Poe devotees from trying to uncover the man's identity. Jerome said the mystery has a charm no one wants to ruin.

While Jerome waits every year to watch from a distance, many other observers give up before the stranger arrives, usually sometime before 6 a.m. Jerome makes anyone watching with him promise not to interfere.

This year a group of revelers arrived at midnight to sing ``Happy Birthday'' to the scribe, but left long before the stranger arrived. ILLUSTRATION: Photo

Edgar Allan Poe


by CNB