Saturday, October 12, 2019
The Narrator in The Tell-Tale Heart :: Tell-Tale Heart Essays
      The Narrator in The Tell-Tale Heart           Through the first person narrator, Edgar Allan Poe's "The  Tell-Tale Heart" illustrates how man's imagination is capable of being so vivid  that it profoundly affects people's lives. The manifestation of the narrator's  imagination unconsciously plants seeds in his mind, and those seeds grow into an  unmanageable situation for which there is no room for reason and which  culminates in murder. The narrator takes care of an old man with whom the  relationship is unclear, although the narrator's comment of "For his gold I had  no desire" (Poe 34) lends itself to the fact that the old man may be a family  member whose death would monetarily benefit the narrator. Moreover, the narrator  also intimates a caring relationship when he says, "I loved the old man. He had  never wronged me. He had never given me insult" (34). The narrator's obsession  with the old man's eye culminates in his own undoing as he is engulfed with  internal conflict and his own transformation from confidence to guilt   .            The fixation on the old man's vulture-like eye forces the  narrator to concoct a plan to eliminate the old man. The narrator confesses the  sole reason for killing the old man is his eye: "Whenever it fell upon me, my  blood ran cold; and so by degrees - very gradually - I made up my mind to rid  myself of the eye for ever" (34). The narrator begins his tale of betrayal by  trying to convince the reader he is not insane, but the reader quickly surmises  the narrator indeed is out of control. The fact that the old man's eye is the  only motivation to murder proves the narrator is so mentally unstable that he  must search for justification to kill. In his mind, he rationalizes murder with  his own unreasonable fear of the eye.            The narrator wrestles with conflicting feelings of  responsibility to the old man and feelings of ridding his life of the man's  "Evil Eye" (34). Although afflicted with overriding fear and derangement, the  narrator still acts with quasi-allegiance toward the old man; however, his  kindness may stem more from protecting himself from suspicion of watching the  old man every night than from genuine compassion for the old man.  					    
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
 
 
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.