Poe, Plagiarism and the Prescriptive Right of the Mob
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Date
1993
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Indiana University Press
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Abstract
I begin with an unavoidable and entirely uncontroversial thesis: "William Wilson"
(1839) is a psychological drama about the harassments of conscience. The thesis is
uncontroversial because it seems to be the accepted interpretation of the tale; for
this reason alone, one could argue, it must inevitably be taken into account! But
it is unavoidable for a more immediate reason as well, namely, that we cannot enter
the tale without first encountering the epigra ph Poe places at its threshold, and
which imprints with typographical insistence the word "CONSCIENCE" on our
reading memory: "What say of it? what say of CONSClENCE grim, /That spectre in
my path?" Although the word "conscience" does not reappear in the rest of the
tale , it will henceforth be almost impossible to understand the narrator's double as
anything other than his conscience: the double does, in fact, turn out to be rather
humorless and "grim ," and his meddlesome behavior certainly justifies his designation as "That spectre in [the narrator's] path." Before detailing all the thematic
elements which support such an understanding, however, we should note that our
interpretation of "William Wilson" as a story about conscience has in an important
way been determined in advance. In thus affecting our access to the tale, the
epigraph has, as it were, intervened from without; and in this sense the epigraph
itself is a "spectre in [our ] path," one which will be as hard to evade as Wilson's
double.
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Elmer, Jonathan. "Poe, Plagiarism and the Prescriptive Right of the Mob." In Discovering Difference, ed. Christoph K. Lohmann (Indiana University Press, 1993): 65-87.
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Book chapter