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| THERE IS NO EXQUISITE BEAUTY WITHOUT SOME STRANGENESS IN THE PROPORTION |
"On 7 October 2000 we returned to the Poe Exhibit of the Poe-Allan headstone at the Saltcoats
Museum. During that visit, we found several other facts and relics about Poe. At the Dundonald Parish Church, between Kilmarnock
and Irvine, Robert Kirk, Archivist, showed us an 1816 Holy Communion pewter service set that had been given by John Galt,
of Craiksland Farm, to the church, in celebration of the end of the War of 1812, and the arrival of his family from America:
John Allan, his wife, Francis, and their adopted son, Edgar Allan Poe. "It has taken years to integrate
into our manuscript the information that we learned on that, our first trip, as well as much more that has come to us from
our correspondents, since. One example is from Sharon Smith, local lay genealogist at Ardrossan. The Poes of Fenwick Parish
were from an estate called "Pokelly." Still another writer, Frank Beattie, of the local Kilmarnock Standard
newspaper, has sent us a map showing that, in fact, there are four Pokellys! Finally, thanks to the Kilmarnock
Historical Society, and Frank Beattie, there is a plaque marking Poe's aunt's and uncle's former home site in Kilmarnock."
The Poe Family Organization of America expressly denies the existence and connection of the Poes of Ayrshire to their family
line! Of course, they are not important to Poe and his works. But see my article in the Ulster-Scot newspaper.
The
Dick Institute, etc....
Located
in Kilmarnock, the Dick Institute is the premier research library of the East Ayrshire Council. The Brills' research for Poe
began at The Dick Institute after Local History Librarian, Anne Geddis, sent a copy of the article from James Gracie, "Poe's
Scottish Connections," in The Scots Magazine, from which they have taken the above illustration. The Irvine
Parish church is precisely as illustrated, while Poe and his English Usherare remarkable conjectures of how they
would have appeared. However, Dr. McKay (Mac Keye), member of the Irvine Burns Club, and friend of the Burns' Statue patron,
Spiers, first wrote of Poe's connections to Irvine, and Ayrshire in his History of Ayrshire. The Dick Institute,
however, is the repository of all public and private documents of this geographical area. This town was the site of many members
of Poe's blood and adoptive family, especially the Parish of Fenwick, from which David Poe left in 1742. The Brills' book, The Mystery of "Mar'se
Eddie" in the Shire, Edgar Allan Poe's Scottish Connections, catalogues each and every site in Scotland that they know of which has
some connection to Poe. They have found that while virtually nothing
of Poe's Scottish connections were known to local public educators and government staff, several of their web pages now include
notes of his having been there with his adoptive father, John Allan, and uncle John Galt. In the process, the Brills discovered
that Allan and Scots' Bard, Robbie Burns, were cousins. These facts are now well known in Scots' periodicals, including the BURNS CHRONICLE.
Search Poe in Scotland and Robert Densmore Brill...
Years of research, travel,
and writing indicate a treasure chest of source information. An important find, since featured in the
Edgar Allan Poe Review, for the Poe Studies Association, is the Poe-Allan family headstone, now on permanent display at Saltcoats Museum.
The Brills were informed that the article triggered a hail of opposition by scholars who insist Poe's family were Irish, and
had no connections in Scotland. Brill has also published, "The Poes of Ayrshire, Scotland," in The
FAMILY TREE magazine, and lectured in Moultrie, Georgia at their Scottish Weekend. That article resulted in several exciting letters from
Poe family members in American, and others.
Presently, they recommend only those interested students
of Poe link with this page and our AOL Homepage [this service has been discontinued by AOL], "Searching for Poe in Scotland"
until our web pages are complete, or we can publish the book.
Also, Scottish Travel Writer, mentioned above, James
Gracie, as well as Atholl, Perthshire, bookstore owner, Nancy Cameron, and North Ayrshire Senior Museum Director, Mark Strachan,
advised that the BBC Scotland Radio were to broadcast a program of "heretofore unknown connections of Poe with Scotland,"
and they await the BBC's response to their inquiry of it. The program, in fact, has since aired in March 2001. In their program
Professor Hook was asked of Brill's pronouncement that Poe is the "Father of American Literature," and replied that
he did not believe so. This issue is both well documented and discussed in the forthcoming book. Additionally, a former child
of Saltcoats, Irene McCart, now living in Germany, provides other insights that only a "local" who has read the
material could know. She returns to Saltcoats in August 2001 for further research on the project's behalf.
Brill
was in Atlanta, Georgia, July 20th, 2001, for the Annual Robert Burns World Federation, Limited's, AGM Conference, where,
for only the second time in the Federation's 115-year history, they will meet outside of Scotland for this major gathering
of Burns' enthusiasts. At that momentous event, Brill learned that both the immediate past president, John Skilling, as well
as the new one, James Gibson, are past students of the Kilmarnock Academy--important to the ongoing effort of Scottish educator
and student outreach of the book's project.
Also as a coincidence of "rubbing elbows" with the members of
the Robert Burns World Federation Limited, Professor G. Ross Roy, owner of the most important collection of Burns materials
outside of the Museum in Alloway, has added the journalism collage of articles and photographs of the Brills' research trips
to Scotland to his Burns Collectionresearch materials and exhibits at the Thomas Cooper Library of the University of South Carolina
at Columbia. Also, of the five featured speakers at the Burns Federation's Annual conference, this year in Atlanta, Georgia,
all of the speakers at the Robert Burns & America Symposium, were visibly interested in the Burns-Poe connections that
the Brills have developed in their research.
Brill invited Esther Hovey, retired professor of
California State University at Long Beach, and wife of Serge Hovey, who collected every song Burns is known to have written,
and who was their table-mate at the Saturday night grand party, to attend the Caledonian Club of San Francisco's 2001 136th
Annual Scottish Gathering and Games; Kenneth Simpson, visiting authority of Burns from the University of Strathclyde, Glasgow;
Thomas Keith, New York actor who has made a study of the statuary of Burns around the world, and James Mackay, Glasgow author
and former Editor of the Burns Chronicle were all interested in Brill's project of Poe's Scottish Connections.
"In
the Burns-Poe blood and family connection, we have made the wonderful connection by correspondence of Mr. Thomas Hutton, Scottish
historian, who had written of that issue, even before John McInnes. Mr. Hutton, Secretary to the Fife Area Association of
Burns Clubs (now retired to Dunfermline), has provided extraordinary information of not only his research and writings on
the Burns-Poe family connections, but of the Alexander and John Allan blood and family connections as well. He was the local
historian who found the existence of the Poe Shipping Line of Ayrshire and Galloway ports that became part of the Allan Line
of Shipping. We are still working on incorporating his newly acquired information into our manuscript. We now have at least
six writers in Scotland who have addressed Poe's Scottish Connections, and have allowed us to use that material. The unbelievable
connections between these Ayrshire Lads continues to amaze, and new updates will appear in these pages."
Finally, Mr. Alan C. Aimone, Senior Special Collections Librarian, of the United States Military Academy Library at
West Point, New York, has retained a journalistic collage and copies of some of the articles in which Brill has published,
such as the Ulster-Scot newspaper of Belfast, Ireland. It is of interest to note that at that same library is a rare copy
of a video, Edgar Allan Poe: The Fever Called Living, which may be available nowhere else? With the foregoing discoveries, one
is reminded that, "...Of a wild lake, with black rock bound/And the tall pines that towered around..." may have
been in Scotland, not North Caroline, after all. We advise readers of the book exactly where that is!
Viewers not familiar with either Robert Burns or John Galt now have online web sites of those and other Scottish writers
and subjects. Not mentioned in our pages here, but treated in our book, are other writers and thinkers who were either influenced
by Poe and his life and works, such as Nabokov in his Lolita, and Nietzsche, as mentioned in his letters to others.
One of the most important actions that Brill has taken since beginning this Project is to have joined established scholarly
and social organizations. For example, as explained above, Brill joined not only the Edgar Allan Poe Society of Richmond,
Virginia, but the Modern Language Association (MLA) as well. Membership in the MLA led to memberships in the STAR Project,
as well as the Association for Scottish Literary Studies, and so on. We have networked what little we knew of Poe into an
area of associations and research never before imagined by others. Details are fully documented in our book. However, as explained
in our discussion of Carl Jung's concept of "spontaneous creation," other scholars, in Scotland, have "discovered"
our efforts, and have published short articles on the Poe Connection with Scotland. This, I hoped for!
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