Tuesday, May 28, 2019

Poes Theory and Practice Reflected in The Cask of Amontillado Essay

Poes Theory and Practice Reflected in The Cask of Amontillado    Edgar Allan Poe, author of brilliant canvasss, poems, and stories, was born(p) in 1809, and sadly died, a young man, in 1849 (665). To truly understand Poe, one must note the time period in which he wrote. It was an eld of Literary Realism and Dark Romanticism, which was Poes arena. The cin one casept of New Literary Criticism was not yet mainstream. However, Poe was a critic as well as an acclaimed author. By observing the talents that Poe admired in the writings of others, one may better understand the inner workings of Poes infamous short stories. In 1854, Poe wrote a review of the whole kit of Nathaniel Hawthorne entitled The Importance of the Single Effect in a Prose Tale (854). In this essay I will compare the strengths Poe champions in Hawthornes works with those that accentuate Poes well known short composition The Cask of Amontillado. According to Poe, Truth is often . . . the aim of the tale (855). Perhaps this is why Poes The Cask of Amontillado borrows its antecede from an allegedly factual incident that took place darn Poe was stationed at Boston Harbor. After unjustly killing a young lieutenant in a duel, a Captain Green was incited, by his men, into drinking a great deal. He was then buried aliveunder the floorboards. (Agatucci) Similarly, the unfortunate Fortunato meets his doom while the warmth of liquor soothes his inhibitions. Also like Captain Green, Fortunato was not depicted as an innocent. Universal truth is considered to be one facet of Literary Realism, or as Shakespeare stated a mirror held up to human nature. There is hardly an emotion more natural than the need for revenge. While the appearance of forgivenes... ...ins at once by addressing the ref as a friend You, who so well know the nature of my soul (666). He then proceeds to enlighten the reader as to the unspeakable act he has committed. Poe does this in a demeanor that rests somewhere between bragging and remorse. The regret, however, is not clear until late in the story with the line My chance ont grew sick... (670). We then realize the dreadful deed was committed some 50 years earlier (671). This leads the reader to a discovered finger of urgency in Montresors confession. Perhaps he is on his own deathbed, one can only guess. This lends itself to Atwoods idea that This is the story Montresor must tell, this is the story we must hear (Agatucci). In other words, the reader must commit to Poe as he has to his reader. The Cask of Amontillado is more than a story it is an insightful experience.    

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