salon.com > Books March 8, 2000
URL: http://www.salon.com/books/feature/2000/03/08/poe

The tell-tale cipher 

Could a mysterious cryptograph be a final message from Edgar Allan Poe? 

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By Jeffery Kurz

For Edgar Allan Poe, dying did not necessarily leave a person speechless. Take "The 
Case of M. Valdemar." The title character, his body decomposing into "a nearly liquid 
mass of loathsome -- of detestable putrescence," still manages enough tongue to beg 
the narrator, a mesmerist, to stop messing with him.

"'For God's sake! -- quick! -- quick! -- put me to sleep -- or, quick! -- waken me! -- 
quick! -- I say to you that I am dead!'" 

To say that speaking from beyond the grave was a Poe obsession would be understating 
the case. Some scholars believe he is trying to speak to us still by way of 
cryptography, a system of secret writings based on a predetermined set of symbols. Poe 
left behind one cryptograph that has remained unsolved for more than 150 years, 
waiting like a corked time capsule for someone to unlock its tangle of symbols. 

Whether the cryptograph in question was written by Poe remains a mystery, perhaps the 
last involving an author whose "The Murders in the Rue Morgue" is considered the first 
modern detective story. As that sagacious inquisitor, Monsieur C. Auguste Dupin, would 
say, "Let us enter into some examinations for ourselves, before we make up an opinion 
respecting them. An inquiry will afford us amusement." The details are as follows. 

Poe, who lived from 1809 to 1849, was fascinated by cryptography and made several 
references to such secret writings in his poems and stories. The solving of a 
cryptograph is the pivotal moment in "The Gold Bug." At the end of 1839, while working 
as a freelance writer for Alexander's Weekly Messenger in Philadelphia, Poe invited 
his readers to send cryptographs to him, boasting that he would solve them all. Until 
he stopped working for the Messenger in May 1840, Poe published his solutions to the 
ciphers and offered his thoughts on cryptography. 

A year later, writing for Graham's Magazine, Poe claimed in an article titled "A Few 
Words on Secret Writing" to have solved all 100 of the cryptographs sent to him by the 
Messenger's readers. While he was writing for Graham's, Poe received a letter from 
someone named W.B. Tyler that contained two cryptographs. Poe published the 
cryptographs for his readers to solve, but never published the solutions. He claimed 
he was wasting time on such puzzles, time that could be better spent writing stories 
and earning money, something he had trouble doing for his entire writing career. The 
Tyler ciphers languished, neglected like yesterday's newspaper. 

In a 1985 essay called "Poe's Secret Autobiography," Louis A. Renza, an English 
professor at Dartmouth College, suggested that Tyler was Poe's nom de plume. Renza 
sees Poe's fiction "as containing not readily apparent anagrams as well as thinly 
disguised allegories of his process of composing his tales -- often the very tale one 
is reading." He felt Poe's cryptography articles shared this approach. "So when I read 
the Tyler letter, with its tease of an insoluble cryptogram, I naturally suspected 
that this was Poe entertaining the possibility himself." 

Renza asked a Dartmouth reference librarian to search for W.B. Tyler in the city 
directories of the major cities where Poe had lived or that he had been familiar with, 
including Washington, Richmond, Baltimore, Philadelphia, New York and Boston. The 
absence of Tyler in those lists was, as Renza admits, "thin evidence, to be sure, but 
enough for me to venture my guess." 

That left the evidence of the ciphers themselves. The shorter of the two was solved by 
way of procrastination. In 1992, looking for a way to avoid working on his 
dissertation, Terence Whalen, now an English professor at the University of Illinois 
at Chicago, solved the first cipher in just a few afternoons of noodling. What started 
as a diversion became a significant part of his dissertation, now a book titled "Edgar 
Allan Poe and the Masses: The Political Economy of Literature in Antebellum America." 
At first, Whalen believed he had uncovered an original Poe text. While the syntax was 
unlike Poe's, the message -- the survival of the soul when confronted by material 
decay -- had a common Poe theme: 

The soul secure in her existence smiles at the drawn dagger and defies its point. The 
stars shall fade away, the sun himself grow dim with age and nature sink in years, but 
thou shall flourish in immortal youth, unhurt amid the war of elements, the wreck of 
matter and the crush of worlds. 

It turns out that the lines are not Poe's, but from the 1713 play "Cato," by Joseph 
Addison, an English essayist, poet and statesman. But that does not rule out Poe as 
the originator of the cryptograph. At the time the cipher was published, Poe was 
trying to get a job in the administration of President John Tyler. Many of the readers 
intrigued enough by his challenge to send cryptographs to Poe were government 
employees (apparently with a lot of time on their hands). Tyler, who succeeded to the 
presidency following the death of William Henry Harrison, had a most troubled term in 
office. His cabinet resigned. The Whig Party disowned him in 1841 and two years later 
introduced impeachment resolutions. Quoting from a play named for a political enemy of 
Caesar, Whalen suggests, could have been a kind of inside joke on the part of Poe, who 
was an acquaintance of Tyler's son, Robert. W.B., muses Whalen, could stand for 
"Wanted By" Tyler. 

In any case, there remains the unsolved cryptograph. Whalen has been stymied in his 
efforts to decode the cipher, which contains about 150 words and very little character 
repetition. Once Whalen recognized that the three-character pattern of 
"comma-dagger-section symbol," repeated seven times, represented the word "the" in the 
first cryptograph, the remainder of the decoding followed fairly easily. The second 
cipher involves more complicated alphabetic correlations, says Whalen, making it far 
more challenging.

Hoping to settle the question of whether Tyler was Poe, Shawn Rosenheim, who teaches 
at Williams College in Massachusetts, is offering $2,500 to anyone who solves the 
second Tyler cryptograph. "It's very likely that if it's solved we'll be able to argue 
convincingly that it is or isn't Poe," says Rosenheim, author of "The Cryptographic 
Imagination: Secret Writing From Edgar Poe to the Internet."

If the decoded text falls short of containing the words "I, Edgar Allan Poe," theme 
and syntax could still indicate Poe is the author. "It's like a fact in a court case," 
says Whalen. "It would have to be argued." The cryptograph and details about the 
contest are available on the Web site of Bokler Software Corp., a Huntsville, Ala., 
company that specializes in encryption software.

If the text turns out to be by Poe, it would fit into his grand scheme of speaking 
from the dead and be the final message from one of the greatest authors in American 
literature, a writer obsessed with the macabre and the transcendent power of words. 
"It's the ultimately condensed detective story," offers Rosenheim. "You have to be 
clever enough to see that there's even a story. Poe is playing a game with all his 
readers and so far his readers aren't winning."

Or, as Poe, in the beginning of his "Shadow -- A Parable," put it: 

Ye who read are still among the living; but I who write shall have long since gone my 
way into the region of shadows. For indeed strange things shall happen, and secret 
things be known, and many centuries shall pass away, ere these memorials be seen of 
men. And, when seen, there will be some to disbelieve, and some to doubt, and yet a 
few who will find much to ponder upon in the characters here graven with a stylus of 
iron.

salon.com | March 8, 2000

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About the writer
Jeffery Kurz lives in Connecticut. He is features editor of the Record-Journal in 
Meriden.

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