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Life & Mortality Quote by Edgar Allan Poe

"The boundaries which divide Life from Death are at best shadowy and vague. Who shall say where the one ends, and where the other begins?"

About this Quote

Poe turns the most absolute binary we have into a smudged pencil line. Life and death, usually treated as hard categories with moral and medical border controls, become "shadowy and vague" - words that don’t just describe uncertainty but actively manufacture it. "Shadowy" implies something seen indirectly, a figure on the edge of perception. "Vague" suggests language failing under pressure. Together they do Poe’s real work: making the reader feel how fragile our confidence is when we talk about endings.

The question "Who shall say" is the quiet knife. It sounds democratic, almost modest, but it’s a challenge to every authority that claims jurisdiction over the threshold: priests, doctors, judges, even the rational self that wants a clean timeline. Poe isn’t arguing in the way an essayist argues; he’s staging epistemic vertigo. If no one can certify the border, then everyone is vulnerable to haunting - grief, guilt, desire, memory - the forces that keep the dead socially present.

Context matters. Poe wrote in an era thick with premature death, epidemics, and unreliable medicine, when people routinely watched loved ones fade without clear clinical milestones. Add the 19th-century fascination with mesmerism, premature burial, and spiritualism, and this line reads like both cultural reportage and provocation. The intent isn’t simply to be spooky; it’s to destabilize the reader’s sense of control. Once the boundary is "shadowy", Poe can populate that penumbra with narrators who may be alive, dead, or something worse: convinced.

Quote Details

TopicMortality
Source
Verified source: The Premature Burial (Edgar Allan Poe, 1844)
Text match: 100.00%   Provider: Cross-Reference
Evidence:
The boundaries which divide Life from Death, are at best shadowy and vague. Who shall say where the one ends, and where the other begins?. This quotation appears verbatim near the beginning of Poe’s short story “The Premature Burial.” The Edgar Allan Poe Society of Baltimore provides a historical text for the Dollar Newspaper printing (dated July 31, 1844), which is generally treated as the first publication of the tale. Britannica also notes first publication in the Dollar Newspaper in July 1844.
Other candidates (1)
The Works of Edgar Allan Poe: Tales of the grotesque and ... (Edgar Allan Poe, Edmund Clarence Sted..., 1894) compilation97.6%
Edgar Allan Poe, Edmund Clarence Stedman, George Edward Woodberry. individual instances more ... The boundaries which...
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Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
Poe, Edgar Allan. (2026, February 11). The boundaries which divide Life from Death are at best shadowy and vague. Who shall say where the one ends, and where the other begins? FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/the-boundaries-which-divide-life-from-death-are-28946/

Chicago Style
Poe, Edgar Allan. "The boundaries which divide Life from Death are at best shadowy and vague. Who shall say where the one ends, and where the other begins?" FixQuotes. February 11, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/the-boundaries-which-divide-life-from-death-are-28946/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"The boundaries which divide Life from Death are at best shadowy and vague. Who shall say where the one ends, and where the other begins?" FixQuotes, 11 Feb. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/the-boundaries-which-divide-life-from-death-are-28946/. Accessed 19 Feb. 2026.

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About the Author

Edgar Allan Poe

Edgar Allan Poe (January 19, 1809 - October 7, 1849) was a Poet from USA.

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