
We often hear about how poor and destitute yet brilliant people were given meager funerals, barely recognized for their genius during their time. While many of these accounts may not be true (such as in the case of Christopher Columbus), others have been proven to be quite accurate.
One such funeral was that of gifted master of the macabre, Edgar Allan Poe. His funeral, only three minutes in length, was so short, with almost no one in attendance, that he wasn’t even given a sermon. He wasn’t given a headstone, either. Though he was exhumed and reburied in 1875, and several poets were invited to attend, only Walt Whitman came to the reburial.
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