Jeopardy! Round, Double Jeopardy! Round, or Tiebreaker Round clues (161 results returned)
#8873, aired 2023-05-17 | POE"M"S $400: This title object of a Thoreau poem is "full-orbed" & "does not wane" the Moon |
#8873, aired 2023-05-17 | POE"M"S $800: Paul Laurence Dunbar wrote, "We wear the" this "that grins and lies, it hides our cheeks and shades our eyes" mask |
#8873, aired 2023-05-17 | POE"M"S $1200: Elizabeth Bishop's "I Am in Need of" this says, "There is a magic made by melody" music |
#8873, aired 2023-05-17 | POE"M"S $1600: Last name of Sam; Robert Service told a tall tale of the frozen north in "The Cremation of" him McGee |
#8873, aired 2023-05-17 | POE"M"S $2000: "The apparition of these faces in the crowd: petals on a wet, black bough" is the entirety of Ezra Pound's "In a Station of" this the Metro |
#8872, aired 2023-05-16 | POE PLACES $200: In "To Helen", her "naiad airs have brought me home/ to the glory that was Greece, and the grandeur that was" this Rome |
#8872, aired 2023-05-16 | POE PLACES $400: Asked what its name is "on the night's Plutonian shore", the raven quoths this nevermore |
#8872, aired 2023-05-16 | POE PLACES $600: In "Lenore" a saintly soul floats on this river of the underworld the Styx |
#8872, aired 2023-05-16 | POE PLACES $800: This Poe maiden lies "in her sepulchre there by the sea--in her tomb by the sounding sea" Annabel Lee |
#8872, aired 2023-05-16 | POE PLACES $1000: Poe rhymed this fabled city of gold with "down the valley of the shadow" El Dorado |
#8261, aired 2020-10-19 | POE "M" $200: In an 1842 Poe story a prince & his noble guests find that this title costume ball is no haven from "the Red Death" Masque |
#8261, aired 2020-10-19 | POE "M" $400: This 2-letter abbreviation precedes "Found in a Bottle" in the title of a Poe tale MS. |
#8261, aired 2020-10-19 | POE "M" $600: In the title of a Poe story, "in the Rue" is in between these 2 words Murders & Morgue |
#8261, aired 2020-10-19 | POE "M" $800: The narrator of "The Tell-Tale Heart" asks, "Why will you say that I am" this?; read it & find out mad |
#8261, aired 2020-10-19 | POE "M" $1000: A powerful storm is at the center of Poe's story "A Descent into" this the Maelstrom |
#7914, aired 2019-01-24 | POTENT POE TALES $400: "The Pit and the Pendulum" finds a man sentenced to death by this tribunal in Toledo the Inquisition |
#7914, aired 2019-01-24 | POTENT POE TALES $1200: "I admit the deed!--Tear up the planks!" shouts the murderer as he shows the police this title body part the tell-tale heart |
#7914, aired 2019-01-24 | POTENT POE TALES $1600: A stolen document provides the title of this story featuring detective C. Auguste Dupin "The Purloined Letter" |
#7914, aired 2019-01-24 | POTENT POE TALES $2000: It is noted twice in a certain Poe short story that Luchesi cannot tell the difference between sherry & this other drink amontillado |
#7914, aired 2019-01-24 | POTENT POE TALES $3,600 (Daily Double): This Poe story's title is realized as the narrator flees the "House" as it cracks & is torn asunder "The Fall of the House of Usher" |
#7638, aired 2017-11-22 | POE FOLKS $400: Things are not going well when we meet Edgar Allan Poe's Roderick, proprietor of "the house of" this Usher |
#7638, aired 2017-11-22 | POE FOLKS $800: Tiny "Hop-Frog" is one of these royal amusers who gets revenge upon an abusive king & his court by setting them all on fire a jester |
#7638, aired 2017-11-22 | POE FOLKS $1200: "The Facts in the Case of M. Valdemar" see a dying man undergo this early form of hypnotism with horrific results mesmerism |
#7638, aired 2017-11-22 | POE FOLKS $1600: In "The Murders in the Rue Morgue", this sleuth is said to come from an illustrious family C. Auguste Dupin |
#7638, aired 2017-11-22 | POE FOLKS $2000: Suffering with an affliction that makes him appear dead, a man fears the title of this Poe story "A Premature Burial" |
#7114, aired 2015-07-16 | POE-ETRY $400: How these title items "tinkle, tinkle, tinkle, in the icy air of night!" the bells |
#7114, aired 2015-07-16 | POE-ETRY $600: "The angels, whispering to one another, can find... none so devotional as that of" this relative a mother |
#7114, aired 2015-07-16 | POE-ETRY $800: "O God! Can I not save one from the pitiless wave? Is all that we see or seem but a" this "within a" this dream |
#7114, aired 2015-07-16 | POE-ETRY $1000: "I was a child and she was a child" in a kingdom by the sea, "she" being this title maiden Annabel Lee |
#7034, aired 2015-03-26 | POE FOLKS $400: This maiden "lived with no other thought than to love and be loved by me" Annabel Lee |
#7034, aired 2015-03-26 | POE FOLKS $800: Last name of Rodrick, who owns a "tumble down" old mansion Usher |
#7034, aired 2015-03-26 | POE FOLKS $1200: This prince who tries to evade the Red Death in a secluded castle bears the name of a Shakespearean island dweller Prospero |
#7034, aired 2015-03-26 | POE FOLKS $1600: His "narrative" of his adventures aboard the Grampus includes mutiny & shipwreck Gordon Pym |
#7034, aired 2015-03-26 | POE FOLKS $2000: In "The Cask of Amontillado", Montresor seeks revenge on this wine connoisseur Fortunato |
#6716, aired 2013-11-25 | POTENT POE‑TABLES $400: "The Bells" features golden wedding bells & sledges with bells of this metal (might make a good Christmas carol) silver |
#6716, aired 2013-11-25 | POTENT POE‑TABLES $800: This poem includes the line "much I marvelled this ungainly fowl to hear discourse so plainly" "The Raven" |
#6716, aired 2013-11-25 | POTENT POE‑TABLES $1200: "And this was the reason that, long ago, in this kingdom by the sea, A wind blew out of a cloud, chilling my beautiful" her Annabel Lee |
#6716, aired 2013-11-25 | POTENT POE‑TABLES $1600: The violent killings of an old woman & her daughter are the title crimes of this detective story (The) Murders in the Rue Morgue |
#6716, aired 2013-11-25 | POTENT POE‑TABLES $2000: The narrator of "The Tell-Tale Heart" hears a low, dull sound--"such a sound as a watch makes when enveloped in" this cotton |
#6345, aired 2012-03-30 | POE'S PROSE $400: A watch-like ticking below the floor causes a man to confess to the murder of an old man in this story "The Tell-Tale Heart" |
#6345, aired 2012-03-30 | POE'S PROSE $800: In "The Premature" this, the narrator equips his tomb with various "escape" devices Burial |
#6345, aired 2012-03-30 | POE'S PROSE $1200: Prince Prospero & 1,000 knights & dames retired to a castle to escape a fatal pestilence in this story "The Masque of the Red Death" |
#6345, aired 2012-03-30 | POE'S PROSE $1600: In this story, 2 friends & a servant go on a hunt for Captain Kidd's buried treasure "The Gold Bug" |
#6345, aired 2012-03-30 | POE'S PROSE $2000: The final line in this Poe story is "The inquisition was in the hands of its enemies" "The Pit and the Pendulum" |
#5928, aired 2010-05-26 | POE IS ME! $400: "Once upon a midnight dreary, while I pondered," this & this weak & weary |
#5928, aired 2010-05-26 | POE IS ME! $800: "Keeping time, time, time, in a sort of runic rhyme, to the throbbing of" these title items bells |
#5928, aired 2010-05-26 | POE IS ME! $1600: "And one by one dropped the revellers in the blood-bedewed halls of their revel" in "The Masque of" this "the Red Death" |
#5928, aired 2010-05-26 | POE IS ME! $2,000 (Daily Double): "And this maiden she lived with no other thought than to love and be loved by me" Annabel Lee |
#5928, aired 2010-05-26 | POE IS ME! $2000: "Luchesi cannot tell" this title pale, dry Spanish wine "from sherry" amontillado |
#5718, aired 2009-06-17 | CELEBRATING POE'S BICENTENNIAL $400: Sadly, Poe's still-mysterious death happened just 10 days before this event he'd planned with Elmira Shelton his wedding |
#5718, aired 2009-06-17 | CELEBRATING POE'S BICENTENNIAL $800: Instead of happy hours, the Poe Museum in Richmond, Va. celebrates Poe with these antonymic events unhappy hours |
#5718, aired 2009-06-17 | CELEBRATING POE'S BICENTENNIAL $1200: Visit Poe's room at the University of Virginia & you'll notice that it has this appropriate number 13 |
#5718, aired 2009-06-17 | CELEBRATING POE'S BICENTENNIAL $1600: Take a tour of St. John's Church Cemetery, where Eliza, this relative of Poe's, is buried, led by an actress portraying her his mother |
#5718, aired 2009-06-17 | CELEBRATING POE'S BICENTENNIAL $2000: The Casemate Museum in Fort Monroe, Va. has an exhibit on Poe's military life, including his appt. to this school West Point |
#5512, aired 2008-07-22 | EDGAR ALLAN POE-POURRI $200: A man's harrowing escape from torture during the Spanish Inquisition is recounted in this Poe favorite "The Pit and the Pendulum" |
#5512, aired 2008-07-22 | EDGAR ALLAN POE-POURRI $400: This lung disease claimed the life of Poe's 24-year-old wife tuberculosis |
#5512, aired 2008-07-22 | EDGAR ALLAN POE-POURRI $800: Spoiler alert! "The Cask of" this potent potable tells of a man sealing his enemy up behind a wall... alive! Amontillado |
#5512, aired 2008-07-22 | EDGAR ALLAN POE-POURRI $1000: This French "Flowers of Evil" author translated Poe's tales into French Charles Baudelaire |
#5512, aired 2008-07-22 | EDGAR ALLAN POE-POURRI $1,800 (Daily Double): In the world's first detective story, C. Auguste Dupin solves the title crimes in "The Murders" here the Rue Morgue |
#5298, aired 2007-09-26 | EDGAR ALLAN POE $200: According to an 1833 description, Poe dressed entirely in this color black |
#5298, aired 2007-09-26 | EDGAR ALLAN POE $400: Poe's "MS. Found in" one of these won a short story contest in 1833 a bottle |
#5298, aired 2007-09-26 | EDGAR ALLAN POE $600: In 1842 Poe reviewed this author's "Barnaby Rudge", which features (hmmm) a human-like raven Charles Dickens |
#5298, aired 2007-09-26 | EDGAR ALLAN POE $800: Poe's wife, who passed away at age 24, had this name, like the state at whose university Poe studied Virginia |
#5298, aired 2007-09-26 | EDGAR ALLAN POE $1,500 (Daily Double): The first obituary of Poe, which spoke of the frailties of genius, appeared in this newspaper The Baltimore Sun |
#4793, aired 2005-06-08 | LINES FROM POE $400: "Thy naiad airs have brought me home to the glory that was" this "and the grandeur that was Rome" Greece |
#4793, aired 2005-06-08 | LINES FROM POE $800: These title objects are "keeping time, time, time, in a sort of runic rhyme" the bells |
#4793, aired 2005-06-08 | LINES FROM POE $1200: The teller of this tale complained of a sound, "such a sound as a watch makes when enveloped in cotton" "The Tell-Tale Heart" |
#4793, aired 2005-06-08 | LINES FROM POE $2,000 (Daily Double): "Luchresi cannot tell" this wine "from sherry" amontillado |
#4793, aired 2005-06-08 | LINES FROM POE $2000: This Poe tale ends, "The French army had entered Toledo. The Inquisition was in the hands of its enemies" "The Pit and the Pendulum" |
#4514, aired 2004-04-01 | EDGAR ALLAN POE $400: This poem famously begins, "Once upon a midnight dreary, while I pondered, weak and weary" "The Raven" |
#4514, aired 2004-04-01 | EDGAR ALLAN POE $800: This man starred in several films based on the works of Edgar Allan Poe, including "The Tomb of Ligeia" Vincent Price |
#4514, aired 2004-04-01 | EDGAR ALLAN POE $1200: These Poe "Murders" are often cited as the world's first detective story "The Murders in the Rue Morgue" |
#4514, aired 2004-04-01 | EDGAR ALLAN POE $1600: The narrator of Poe's story "The Pit and the Pendulum" is a victim of this infamous Iberian institution the Spanish Inquisition |
#4514, aired 2004-04-01 | EDGAR ALLAN POE $2000: In this "colorful" Poe story, Prince Prospero tries to avoid a deadly plague "The Masque of the Red Death" |
#4409, aired 2003-11-06 | POE-POURRI $400: Poe called this title maiden "My darling -- my life and my bride" Annabel Lee |
#4409, aired 2003-11-06 | POE-POURRI $1200: The raven perched on a bust of this Greek goddess "just above my chamber door" Athena |
#4409, aired 2003-11-06 | POE-POURRI $1600: The title of this 1843 story refers to a scarab beetle with a death's head marking "The Gold Bug" |
#4409, aired 2003-11-06 | POE-POURRI $2000: This detective appears in "The Mystery of Marie Roget" & "The Murders in the Rue Morgue" Auguste Dupin |
#4409, aired 2003-11-06 | POE-POURRI $3,200 (Daily Double): One of the title objects in this Poe story had a "terrifically wide sweep (some thirty feet or more)" "The Pit and the Pendulum"? |
#4277, aired 2003-03-18 | AN EDGAR ALLAN POE-POURRI $800: (Jimmy of the Clue Crew reports from by a fire.) Come gather by the fire while I share this 1843 story about a murdered man who "took a licking and kept on ticking" "The Tell-Tale Heart" |
#4277, aired 2003-03-18 | AN EDGAR ALLAN POE-POURRI $1200: One of Poe's stories is called "The Thousand-and-Second Tale of" this storytelling woman Scheherazade |
#4277, aired 2003-03-18 | AN EDGAR ALLAN POE-POURRI $1,500 (Daily Double): A poem by Poe begins, "Hear the sledges with" these the bells |
#4020, aired 2002-02-08 | POE-TRY $400: The title character of this poem by Edgar Allan Poe is described as an "ungainly fowl" & an "ebony bird" "The Raven" |
#4020, aired 2002-02-08 | POE-TRY $1200: In his youth, Poe wrote one of these 14-line poems "to science" a sonnet |
#4020, aired 2002-02-08 | POE-TRY $1,500 (Daily Double): Lines in this poem include "How they tinkle, tinkle, tinkle in the icy air of the night" & "How they ring out their delight" "The Bells" |
#4020, aired 2002-02-08 | POE-TRY $1600: Poe wrote 2 love poems called "to" this name, also that of a famed beauty of Troy Helen |
#4020, aired 2002-02-08 | POE-TRY $2000: "I and my Annabel Lee" had a love that was coveted by angels of this highest order seraphims |
#3717, aired 2000-10-31 | POE-POURRI $100: Mr. Edward Stapleton was one of those who experienced a "premature" this -- can you dig it? burial |
#3717, aired 2000-10-31 | POE-POURRI $300: There is no doubt the treasure in "The Gold Bug" was part of this pirate's booty Captain Kidd |
#3717, aired 2000-10-31 | POE-POURRI $400: At the masque "He had come like a thief in the night. And one-by-one he dropped the revellers." The Red Death |
#3717, aired 2000-10-31 | POE-POURRI $500: Claustrophobic tale that ends "For the half of a century no mortal has disturbed them. In pace requiescat!" "The Cask of Amontillado" |
#3717, aired 2000-10-31 | POE-POURRI $1,000 (Daily Double): "I admit the deed! Tear up the planks!" this title object is beneath them "The Tell-Tale Heart" |
#3384, aired 1999-04-29 | POE FOLKS $200: "I was a child, and she was a child, in this kingdom by the sea, but we loved with a love that was more than love, I" & she "Annabel Lee" |
#3384, aired 1999-04-29 | POE FOLKS $400: Last name of Roderick & his sister Madeline, who fell dead just before their house falls into a mountain lake Usher |
#3384, aired 1999-04-29 | POE FOLKS $600: This masked apparition joins Prince Prospero & his friends at a costume ball in a secluded castle The Red Death |
#3384, aired 1999-04-29 | POE FOLKS $800: This scholarly amateur detective solves the baffling case of "The Purloined Letter" C. Auguste Dupin |
#3384, aired 1999-04-29 | POE FOLKS $1000: His "Narrative" recounts his adventures on the Grampus as it sails from Nantucket to the South Seas Arthur Gordon Pym |
#3346, aired 1999-03-08 | I HAVEN'T READ POE, BUT... $200: I know, it's a poem about the inventor of the telephone & his family "The Bells" |
#3346, aired 1999-03-08 | I HAVEN'T READ POE, BUT... $400: Sure, it's a tale about a peach stone & a clock "The Pit and the Pendulum" |
#3346, aired 1999-03-08 | I HAVEN'T READ POE, BUT... $600: In this story an earthquake takes down a Broadway theater... right? "The Fall of the House of Usher" |
#3346, aired 1999-03-08 | I HAVEN'T READ POE, BUT... $800: In this story, it's the woman's magazine Poe "found in a bottle" "MS. Found in a Bottle" |
#3346, aired 1999-03-08 | I HAVEN'T READ POE, BUT... $1000: It's a valentine that contains the story of a Swiss archer "The Tell-Tale Heart" |
#2923, aired 1997-04-23 | EDGAR ALLAN POE $200: A 1949 book on Poe's life & works had an introduction by this psychoanalyst who died in 1939 Sigmund Freud |
#2923, aired 1997-04-23 | EDGAR ALLAN POE $400: In 1835's "The Unparalleled Adventure of One Hans Pfaall", Hans balloons 231,920 miles to this place The moon |
#2923, aired 1997-04-23 | EDGAR ALLAN POE $600: In "A Predicament", a woman's head becomes stuck in a large clock & the minute hand finally does this Decapitates her |
#2923, aired 1997-04-23 | EDGAR ALLAN POE $800: This tale ends, "The Inquisition was in the hands of its enemies" "The Pit and the Pendulum" |
#2923, aired 1997-04-23 | EDGAR ALLAN POE $1,000 (Daily Double): Name shared by the prince who held the masque of the red death & Miranda's father in "The Tempest" Prospero |
#2715, aired 1996-05-24 | POE-POURRI $100: Twain said it's the only animal that blushes; Poe said it's the only animal that diddles humans (man) |
#2715, aired 1996-05-24 | POE-POURRI $200: Types of these mentioned by Poe in a poem include silver, wedding & alarum bells |
#2715, aired 1996-05-24 | POE-POURRI $300: Title home referred to as a "mansion of gloom" the House of Usher |
#2715, aired 1996-05-24 | POE-POURRI $400: This torture instrument had a crescent of glittering steel & it "hissed as it swung" a pendulum |
#2715, aired 1996-05-24 | POE-POURRI $500: In the "Tellmenow Isitsoornot", Poe found "the thousand-and-second tale of" this woman Scheherazade |
#2250, aired 1994-05-20 | POE TALES $200: Story that ends, "I admit the deed!—tear up the planks! Here, here!—it is the beating of his hideous heart!" "The Tell-Tale Heart" |
#2250, aired 1994-05-20 | POE TALES $400: It could have been titled "The Stolen Correspondence" "The Purloined Letter" |
#2250, aired 1994-05-20 | POE TALES $600: In this story C. Auguste Dupin deduces that 2 Paris homicides were committed by an orangutan "The Murders in the Rue Morgue" |
#2250, aired 1994-05-20 | POE TALES $1000: This story is told from the point of view of a prisoner of the Spanish Inquisition in Toledo "The Pit and the Pendulum" |
#2250, aired 1994-05-20 | POE TALES $1,500 (Daily Double): Fortunato, a wine connoisseur, is entombed with stone & mortar by Montressor in this tale "The Cask of Amontillado" |
#1912, aired 1992-12-22 | POE-POURRI $200: It's the raven's reply to "Quaff, oh quaff this kind nepenthe and forget this lost Lenore!" Nevermore |
#1912, aired 1992-12-22 | POE-POURRI $400: By the end of this horrific story, the last member of the Usher family is dead "The Fall of the House of Usher" |
#1912, aired 1992-12-22 | POE-POURRI $600: The title objects of which Poe wrote, "Through the balmy air of night how they ring out their delight!" "The Bells" |
#1912, aired 1992-12-22 | POE-POURRI $800: In this famous Poe story, Prince Prospero drops dead at his own masked ball "The Masque of the Red Death" |
#1912, aired 1992-12-22 | POE-POURRI $1,000 (Daily Double): Poe was terribly ill when he was found in a tavern in this city on October 3, 1849; he died a few days later Baltimore |
#1497, aired 1991-02-19 | POE-POURRI $200: In 1845 his last volume of poetry featured this bird "and Other Poems" The Raven |
#1497, aired 1991-02-19 | POE-POURRI $400: In 1830 his foster father, John Allan, helped Poe get an appointment to this military academy West Point |
#1497, aired 1991-02-19 | POE-POURRI $600: The last members of this family were Roderick & Madeline & they fall by the story's end the Usher family |
#1497, aired 1991-02-19 | POE-POURRI $1,000 (Daily Double): 16-letter word used by Poe to describe the runic rhyme that musically welled from the bells tintinnabulation |
#1497, aired 1991-02-19 | POE-POURRI $1000: In this story the victim's having a vulture-like eye is the reason the narrator must kill him "The Tell-Tale Heart" |
#1190, aired 1989-11-03 | POE $200: Completes the line from "To Helen", "To the glory that was Greece & ..." "The Grandeur that was Rome" |
#1190, aired 1989-11-03 | POE $400: In this tale William Legrand & his servant Jupiter find a rare entomological specimen "The Gold Bug" |
#1190, aired 1989-11-03 | POE $600: 1845 poem set in December, at midnight in a chamber "The Raven" |
#1190, aired 1989-11-03 | POE $800: We're not sure who was the last of the Mohicans, but we do know Roderick was the last man in this line The House of Usher |
#1190, aired 1989-11-03 | POE $1000: According to the Oxford Companion to American Lit., they were sleigh, wedding, alarm & funeral "The Bells" |
#938, aired 1988-10-05 | POE-POURRI $200: In 1 story, 1 of these embalmed Egyptians gets dressed up in sky blue pantaloons & a pink chemise a mummy |
#938, aired 1988-10-05 | POE-POURRI $400: In the poem of the same name, "they are neither brute nor human -- they are ghouls: and their king it is who tolls" the bells |
#938, aired 1988-10-05 | POE-POURRI $600: In this tale, a stranger in a horrifying costume kills the revelers at a masked ball "The Masque of the Red Death" |
#938, aired 1988-10-05 | POE-POURRI $800: The 1st words in "The Raven" aren't "once upon a time" but "once upon" this a midnight dreary |
#938, aired 1988-10-05 | POE-POURRI $1000: This story ends with the hero saved & the Inquisition "in the hands of its enemies" "The Pit and the Pendulum" |
#797, aired 1988-02-09 | POE $100: "The Murders in the Rue Morgue" were perpetrated in this city -- by a big ape Paris |
#797, aired 1988-02-09 | POE $200: In 1987, a bust of Poe vanished from a museum & turned up in a bar named for this bird the raven |
#797, aired 1988-02-09 | POE $300: Poe wrote of these poetic objects, "How they tinkle, tinkle, tinkle, in the icy air of night!" The Bells |
#797, aired 1988-02-09 | POE $400: Poe story set during the Inquisition in a dungeon in Toledo, Spain "The Pit and the Pendulum" |
#797, aired 1988-02-09 | POE $500: The 1st name of Poe's teenage wife, it's also the name of 1 of the states in which he lived Virginia (Clemm) |
#714, aired 1987-10-15 | POE-POURRI $200: Poe called it "this grim, ungainly, ghastly, gaunt & ominous bird of yore" the raven |
#714, aired 1987-10-15 | POE-POURRI $400: Poe joined this branch of the military under a pseudonym, Edgar A. Perry the Army |
#714, aired 1987-10-15 | POE-POURRI $600: Young Edgar's foster family, they're reflected in his name the Allans |
#714, aired 1987-10-15 | POE-POURRI $700 (Daily Double): The major East Coast cities in which Poe was born & died, they both begin with "B" Boston & Baltimore |
#714, aired 1987-10-15 | POE-POURRI $1000: 1 of the 3 Poe stories in which the detective C. Auguste Dupin appears (1 of) "The Purloined Letter"[*], "The Mystery of Marie Rogêt" or "The Murders in the Rue Morgue" |
#573, aired 1987-02-18 | POE-ETRY $200: Not surprisingly, the heroines of Poe's "Lenore", "The Sleeper" & "Ulalume" are all in this condition dead |
#573, aired 1987-02-18 | POE-ETRY $400: Tho the poem's "To My Mother", he wrote for this relative, "mother to the one I loved so dearly" mother-in-law |
#573, aired 1987-02-18 | POE-ETRY $600: The "Poe"m named for them repeats this tintinnabulating word 59 times bells |
#573, aired 1987-02-18 | POE-ETRY $800: Its permanent perch was "on the pallid bust of Pallas" "The Raven" |
#573, aired 1987-02-18 | POE-ETRY $1000: Poe's poem "The Haunted Palace" is quoted as if written by a character in the story of this doomed house House of Usher |
#479, aired 1986-10-09 | POE $200: City in which Poe set "The Murders in the Rue Morgue" Paris |
#479, aired 1986-10-09 | POE $400: Poe's tale of terror where a murderer still hears "this" beating "The Tell-Tale Heart" |
#479, aired 1986-10-09 | POE $600: In 1842 tale, title tortures faced by a victim of the Spanish Inquisition "The Pit and the Pendulum" |
#179, aired 1985-05-16 | POE $200: Appropriately, it was Poe's first writing form poetry |
#179, aired 1985-05-16 | POE $400: American director famous for series of Poe films in the early '60s Roger Corman |
#179, aired 1985-05-16 | POE $600: Last name of twins Roderick & Madeline, together they brought down the house the Ushers |
#179, aired 1985-05-16 | POE $800: Double relation to Poe of Virginia Clemm cousin & wife |
#179, aired 1985-05-16 | POE $1,500 (Daily Double): Title referring to Prince Prospero's plague party "The Masque of the Red Death" |
#64, aired 1984-12-06 | POE $100: Time when the raven came rapping midnight |
Final Jeopardy! Round clues (0 results returned)
Didn't find what you wanted? Try your J! Archive search using Google, Bing, or Yahoo!