Seventh Annual New Year’s Eve Reading at Poe’s Grave

photos: Jennifer Bishop

This year’s ringing out the old with hope for the new poetry ritual at Poe’s Grave celebrated the writer Nikki Giovanni, who died December 9th, 2024 at age 81. 

Alvarez sips a cup of Dunkin’ coffee at the corner of Fayette and Greene as the first of several Giovanni poems are read adjacent to Edgar’s monument.

Poeinbaltimore.org director Enrica Jang also reads from Nikki’s work after telling the crowd of the Poe House museum expansion on Amity Street.

2024 group photo. Front: Anne Haddad and Rosalia Scalia. Middle: Jang, Alvarez and poet Jenny Keith. Rear: Tourist Michael from Florida who happened by and spent the morning with us; photographer Phil Laubner and videographer Patrick and, in newsboy cap, Will Backstrom.

The Laws of Motion

By Nikki Giovanni
(for Harlem Magic)

The laws of science teach us a pound of gold weighs as   
much as a pound of flour though if dropped from any   
undetermined height in their natural state one would
reach bottom and one would fly away

Laws of motion tell us an inert object is more difficult to   
propel than an object heading in the wrong direction is to   
turn around. Motion being energy—inertia—apathy.   
Apathy equals hostility. Hostility—violence. Violence   
being energy is its own virtue. Laws of motion teach us

Black people are no less confused because of our   
Blackness than we are diffused because of our
powerlessness. Man we are told is the only animal who   
smiles with his lips. The eyes however are the mirror of
the soul

The problem with love is not what we feel but what we   
wish we felt when we began to feel we should feel
something. Just as publicity is not production: seduction
is not seductive

If I could make a wish I’d wish for all the knowledge of all   
the world. Black may be beautiful Professor Micheau
says but knowledge is power. Any desirable object is
bought and sold—any neglected object declines in value.   
It is against man’s nature to be in either category

If white defines Black and good defines evil then men
define women or women scientifically speaking describe
men. If sweet is the opposite of sour and heat the
absence of cold then love is the contradiction of pain and
beauty is in the eye of the beheld

Sometimes I want to touch you and be touched in   
return. But you think I’m grabbing and I think you’re   
shirking and Mama always said to look out for men like   
you

So I go to the streets with my lips painted red and my   
eyes carefully shielded to seduce the world my reluctant   
lover

And you go to your men slapping fives feeling good   
posing as a man because you know as long as you sit   
very very still the laws of motion will be in effect

Copyright the Estate of Nikki Giovanni


Nikki Giovanni, born in Knoxville, Tennessee in 1943, was buried in Cincinnati in December 2024.

Nikki at Edgar

New Year’s Eve / 2024

By Anne Haddad

On the morning of New Year’s Eve, before we go our separate ways to close out the year, a few of us gather to take turns reading poetry from the pedestal of Edgar Allan Poe’s grave. Rarely more (but not nevermore) than a dozen of us any given year.

         On December 31, 2024, I counted 11 people. All of us readers, a few writers, two photographers, a videographer and friends of the aforementioned. Some are regulars, like me.

       Every year, there will be one or two people who hadn’t known there would be anything going on. People who visit purely to pay homage to the famous writer’s resting place. If you go to Poe’s grave on any morning and sit, someone else will eventually show up. Try it. To these pilgrims, we always say hello and would you like some hot coffee and doughnuts and, without fail, Lebanese baklava with pistachio?  

    We typicall read our favorite passage from Poe, whether a whole poem, part of The Raven, part of The Bells, the opening paragraphs of the short story, The Fall of the House of Usher, a perfect example of telling me something bad will happen without having to say that something bad will happen. It was fun to look for unexpected and obscure Poe, who wrote about furniture, science, traveling salesmen, everything.

    In 2024, we broke from tradition. We read the work of a poet who has died that year: Nikki Giovanni (1943-2024). She was among the first poets I became aware of as a child. Her distinctive name, often in lowercase, and her poems in the Scholastic Book Club anthologies that I bought for pennies — 35, 75 or at most 95 cents, handing to Mrs. Bietry a white envelope heavy with coins and my order slip.

     Nikki Giovanni, along with Robert Frost, Emily Dickinson, Alfred Tennyson, e.e. cummings (who, like Giovanni, often preferred the lower case). Most of those poets were, like Poe, already dead by the time I learned to read, yet living eternally in their poems, as Giovanni will.

       On the last day of the year, a year that has left some of us reeling, I chose to read Nikki Giovanni’s “The Laws of Motion.” I was surprised to later see that it had been written in 1970. For me, it’s all about the last half of 2024.

Sixth Annual New Year’s Eve Reading at Poe’s Grave

All photos by Philip Edward Laubner

The 2023 New Year’s Eve Reading at Poe’s Grave commenced at 9:30 a.m. at the corner of Fayette & Greene. It was a small group this year, anchored by braciolejournal.com founders Alvarez, Oldham and Crawley along with regulars Amy Scattergood and Anne Haddad.

Fortified by a “box of Joe,” a dozen doughnuts and gourmet goodies from the Ovenbird Bakery in Highlandtown, we were visited – as always — by the “rough sleepers” living on the downtown streets and this year — because of a big game at the stadium down the street — football tourists from around the country, including a 6th grade girl from Dallas/Fort Worth who aspires to be an architect.

That afternoon, the Ravens crushed the Miami Dolphins 56-to-19.

Of the poetry and prose read this year, one piece stood out as an outlier, an essay away from the well-worn favorites and unknown to a few of the Poe acolytes in attendance.

It was “The Philosophy of Furniture”, brought to us that cold, clear morning by Ms. Scattergood.

All are invited to join us on the morning of 12.31.24

Fifth Annual New Year’s Eve Reading at Poe’s Grave 12.31.22

Photo credit: Jennifer Bishop

Jackie Oldham reads “A Dream Within A Dream” at the Fifth Annual New Year’s Eve morning reading of the works of Edgar Allan Poe at his grave in downtown Baltimore.

Photos: Macon Street Books

Rafael Alvarez, with Poe fans (left) and Tyrone Crawley, with Poe fans on the right, celebrate the Fifth Annual coffee, doughnuts and poetry at Edgar’s grave, corner of East Fayette and Greene Street near Camden Yards. The co-founders of the Story Company literary press in the late 1980s, Alvarez and Crawley began the New Year’s Eve tradition at the great one’s grave in 2018. They have been friends for 50 years.