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Cask Of Amontillado And Black Cat Essay (стр. 2 из 2)

eventually venture into the basement where both the cat and his wife are walled

in. In an attempt to mock the authorities in their fruitless search, the main

character knocks on the wall commenting on the well-constructed house.

"That the cat embodies this very image of paradoxical perverseness is

suggested by the narrator describes the sound it makes when he raps on the wall:

"a howl – a wailing shriek, half of horror, half of triumph, such as might

have risen only out of hell, conjointly from the throats of the

damnation"(3:859)"(May 75). The black cat, which he overlooked and

buried with his wife, has yet again comeback to haunt him. The black cat’s cry

alerts the police that Shrout 11 there is something behind the fake wall, and

upon investigation the body of his murdered wife is discovered: In the next, a

dozen stout arms were toiling at the wall. It fell bodily. The corpse, already

greatly decayed and clotted with gore, stood erect before the eyes of the

spectators. Upon its head with red extended mouth and solitary eye of fire, sat

the hideous beast whose craft had seduced me into murder, and whose informing

voice had consigned me to hangman. I had walled the monster up within the tomb

(Poe, Tales of Mystery and Imagination 349) After analyzing the three aspects of

Poe’s writing, style, theme and use of irony, we as readers have a better

understanding of not only how to read Poe’s tales, but also the meaning that

goes much deeper then the surface of the story. The unique perception that that

Poe’s gives his stories enables the reader to identify with the main characters’

thoughts, actions and feeling. Also, the themes he uses, although at times are

grotesque, are original, and entice the reader, showing the darker side of the

human soul. Lastly, the use of heavy irony gives Poe’s stories an unpredictable

edge that keeps the reader coming back again and again to read his Gothic tales.

These three aspects of Poe’s ingenious writing make them the literary classics

that they are today.

May, Charles E. Edgar Allen Poe: "A Study of the Short Fiction."

New York: Twayne Publishers, 1981. 78-81. Poe, Edgar A. Tales of Edgar Allen

Poe. New York: Books of Wonder, 1991. 51-59. Poe, Edgar A. Tales of Mystery and

Imagination. New Jersey: Castle Book Sales Inc. 339-349. Saliba, David R. A

Psychology of Fear: " The Nightmare Formula of Edgar Allen Poe." New

York: UP of America, 1980. 69,70,79. Thompson, G.R. Poe’s Fiction: "

Romantic Irony in Gothic Tales." Wisconsin: The University of Wisconsin

Press, 1973. 13,14, 99-103, 109,172-174.