Among my parasocial relationships, the strangest are those with people long dead. Poe is among them, and, I suspect, this is probably a common thing. As I age and find it difficult to muster the energy to attend large meetings with lots of people, the one factor that excited me about this year’s AAR/SBL, apart from being in New England again, was meeting Poe. Now, I know that “Poe Returning to Boston” isn’t actually Poe himself. But I do believe that places retain something of the essence of what happens in them. Poe was born in Boston, on Carver Street. The building itself was demolished some time ago. I set out to see the site yesterday morning before the conference began, only to find that it is now fenced off, having been acquired by MassDOT. As I stood there, wondering, fearing, it occurred to me just how much of a role pilgrimages play in our lives.
I’ve written about my SBL experiences before on this blog—look at my November posts for many of the years I’ve been doing this—but Boston is by far the most personal. Part of it is certainly the fact that I lived here for about three years, but Poe is definitely part of it too. As I went to do an uncrowded photo essay of Stefanie Rocknak’s statue, although it was quite early on a Sunday morning, and also quite chilly, I wasn’t the only one there. A couple came along to pose with Poe. When I took my initial photo (on my Saturday morning post) I had to await a different couple consorting with Poe. I know this isn’t Poe, but it has come to represent his presence is my favorite city. The mingling of emotions was strong.
The sign designating this as Edgar Allan Poe Square is faded and weather-beaten. I can imagine that local politicians have headier issues with which to wrestle, beyond replacing an aging sign for aging tourists. And having read J. W. Ocker’s Poe-Land, I know there’s a bust of Poe in the Public Library now. I walk by it each morning and evening, but the conference schedule keeps me out. Poe himself was no great fan of Boston but this is where the world first met him. I know that I should get my head in the game of academic conferencing, but I’m a little distracted by the presence of a friend I never met. And breathing the rarified air of New England.

