"The Masque of the Red Death"
By Edgar Allan Poe

Transcription, correction, editorial commentary, and markup by Students and Staff of The University of Virginia
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Sources

New York : J. S. Redfield, 1850First published as "The Mask of the Red Death" in Graham's Lady's and Gentleman's Magazine in 1842. The story was republished in the Broadway Journal under the title "The Masque of the Red Death" in 1845, when Poe was editing that magazine. That is the title under which the story has become known, and we use it here. The text is based on the text published in The Works of the Late Edgar Allan Poe volume 1, Tales in 1850. Page images are drawn from the HathiTrust digital facsimile of the 1850 collection, sourced from the University of Minnesota.Baltimore, MD: Edgar Allan Poe Society of Baltimore, n.d. Text for this digital edition drawn from https://www.eapoe.org/works/tales/masqueb.htm

Editorial Statements

Research informing these annotations draws on publicly-accessible resources, with links provided where possible. Annotations have also included common knowledge, defined as information that can be found in multiple reliable sources. If you notice an error in these annotations, please contact lic.open.anthology@gmail.com.

Original spelling and capitalization is retained, though the long s has been silently modernized and ligatured forms are not encoded.

Hyphenation has not been retained, except where necessary for the sense of the word.

Page breaks have been retained. Catchwords, signatures, and running headers have not. Where pages break in the middle of a word, the complete word has been indicated prior to the page beginning.

Materials have been transcribed from and checked against first editions, where possible. See the Sources section.


Citation

Poe, Edgar Allan. "The Masque of the Red Death". The Works of the Late Edgar Allan Poe, J. S. Redfield, 1850 , Volume I pp 339-345 . Literature in Context: An Open Anthology. http://anthologydev.lib.virginia.edu/work/Poe/poe-masque. Accessed: 2024-12-26T11:30:28.793Z
TEST Audio
[TP] THE WORKS
OF THE LATE
EDGAR ALLAN POE
WITH
NOTICES OF HIS LIFE AND GENIUS.
IN TWO VOLUMES.
VOL. I.
TALES.
NEW YORK:
J. S. REDFIELD, CLINTON HALL.
1850.

Footnotes

masque_This story was first published in Graham's Magazine, a journal published in Philadelphia, in May 1842, under the title "The Mask of the Red Death: A Fantasy." Poe was editor of the magazine from February 1841 to April 1842; the story was probably at the printers' at the time he departed. (No one knows for certain why he left the mgazine, but most accounts suggest that he did so impulsively.) The story was republished in the Broadway Magazine in July 1845 when Poe was editing that magazine as "The Masque of the Red Death"; Poe had a habit of recycling stories, and in an era without copyright protection, there was nothing to stop him. "The Masque of the Red Death" is the title under which the story has become known, but the original title is still relevant, and Poe probably intends a play on words, with the word invoking both "masque" in the sense of an aristocratic spectacle or entertainment, and "mask" in the sense of the mask that the partygoers, including the character of the Red Death, are wearing. Poe's modern editor T. O. Mabbott suggests that the story of an aristocrat having a party in the midst of a plague probably comes from stories about such incidents that occurred during a cholera epidemic in Paris in 1832. Nathaniel Willis published an account of "a masque ball" in New York Mirror that he attended that year in the midst of the outbreak that seems to resemble the scenario of Poe's story closely: "There were some two thousand people, I should think, in fancy dresses, most of them grotesque and satirical, and the ball was kept up till seven in the morning, with all the extravagant gayety, noise, and fun, with which the French people manage such matters. There was a cholera-waltzm and a cholera-galopade, and one man, immensely tall, dresed as a personification of the Cholera itself, with skeleton armor, bloodshot eyes, and other horrible appurtances of a walking pestilence." [Nathaniel P. Willis, Pencillings by the Way, in The Prose Works of N. P. Willis, Philadelphia, 1854, p. 24.] Willis, perhaps the most famous journalist of the period, was so well known to American readers, and so close a friend of Poe's at this time, that it seems very likely that Poe read his account of rich people partying in the midst of an epidemic. "The Masque of the Red Death" has remained one of Poe's most popular short stories.
pestban_ "Pest Ban" refers to the sign by which an individual could be incontrovertibly diagnosed with the plague.
prospero_Prospero is, of course, the name of the central character in William Shakespeare's 1611 play The Tempest.
improvisatori_A group of Italian poets who were known for their ability to improvise songs on the spot. They may go back as far as the fourteenth century; by the middle of the nineteenth century, when Poe was writing, they were disappearing.
gothic_A stone arched window, such as one in what we now call a "Gothic" cathedral.
decora_ 'Decora' is the Latin term for 'customs'.
fete_ 'Fête' is the French term for 'party'.
hernani_Hernani, or l"Honneur Castilian is a play by Victor Hugo, first staged in 1830 in Paris. Set in the sixteenth-century Spanish court, the play had a copmlicated and violent plot.
arabesque_"Arabesque" in this context means only vaguely Islamic or Arab in style.
herod_In the New Testament, Herod is the King of Israel at the time of the birth of Jesus. In the Gospel of Matthew, he is responsible for the massacre of the innocents, where he was said to have murdered all boys under the age of two when he heard of the birth of a king who would someday rival him. The phrase "out-Herod Herod" comes from Shakespeare's Hamlet.
mummer_A masked dancer in a traditional English dance, here probably being used more generally to describe a masked performer.
cerement_ Waxed wrappings for the dead; or, generally, grave-clothes. Source: Oxford English Dictionary.