Ever wonder what is around in other people's basement rats or snakes or even a dead body? Everyone has their secrets about their life, everyone acts perfect. but is that really the case. That just means they are trying to hide something because no one life is perfect we all have our own little secrets. You're about to encounter what happened in a basement of a home in Italy. “The Cast of the Amontillado”, by Edgar Allan Poe, is the best short story because the theme is very unsettling for the reader, foreshadowing adds depth, and the symbol for revenge give a unique perspective. First, the theme of the story is a very unsettling for the reader because of the way Poe says things in his voice. “ It’s walls had been lined with human remains piled to a vault overhead in the fashion in the great catacombs of paris.” The walls had been lined with human remains meaning there were bones all over and human parts giving it an unsettling point of view. It also states that they are in a catacomb that is wet, dark, and moldy which is not a very good place to be. Catacombs are also used for dead people catacombs had bones all over giving the wrong vibes of why they needed to be down there. “Montresor yells in …show more content…
There is no better way to there's no better way to what? but that this man is twisted to have people in his basement where they can be found. Do you think they can be behind your walls every heat\r the little noises as you lay in your bed? They way this other wrought his story he is trying to make you have mystery of what is going to happen. And was there really wine down there? What was his motive for even killing the poor dude? You will never know unless you read the book “The Cast of The Amontillado,” by Edgar allen Poe. remember it is only murder unless they find the body otherwise it is just a missing
It contained stairways to nowhere, open gas pipes in the rooms he rented and from his room he could control the gas flow, trap doors and shuts leading to the basement, a crematorium for body disposal, doors opening to nowhere, and a built-in bank safe where he would lock people in and suffocate
Poe’s stories “Cask of Amontillado” and “The Tell-Tale Heart” display the dark romantic theme of a man’s soul by the development of the setting, plot, and characterization. As both stories begin, the initial device used to advance the theme is setting, which remains grim and sinister throughout the duration of both stories. Accompanying these physical details is the plot, each of which includes the murder of an innocent man. Most notably, the characterization of each piece’s narrator allows the audience to fully understand their internal struggle and its final resolution. While “Cask of Amontillado” contains an overall intriguing and unexpected plot as well as setting, the narrator’s characterization proves this story to conclude in a less
In the three passages written by Poe (The Masque of the Red Death, The Tell-Tale Heart, and The Cask of Amontillado), their settings contribute to their mood and to their tone. Poe chose the settings of his passages very wisely. He always thought about how they would affect the story and what role they would play in the reader 's understanding of the mood and/or the tone. The setting in each of these passages is different, However they are also somewhat alike. So the mood and the tone of the three passages (The Masque of the Red Death, The Tell-Tale Heart, and The Cask of Amontillado) have similar aspects, however they also have some different ones, simultaneously.
In “The Cast of Amontillado” written by Edgar Allan Poe and in “A Good Man Is Hard to Find” written by Flannery O’Conner, there are some similarities within the characterization and within the plot of these two short stories. Let us begin with “The Cast of Amontillado”. Edgar Allan Poe used characterization to show us the narrator’s personality. In his story, the narrator is the unreliable, egotistical protagonist. At the carnival where Montresor found Fortunato dressed in a jester outfit, Montresor says, “My dear Fortunato, you are luckily met (Poe 165).”
In The Cask Of Amontillado, Poe uses word choice, figures of speech, sensory details, imagery, and sentence structure to portray a certain mood in his writing, This mood is usually dark, menacing, and invokes fear in the reader. One example of this is diction. Poe uses exquisite word choice to vividly explain a setting and actions. The way Poe crafts his words and chooses which words to explain scenes in the story gives the reader a great visual. For example, “The wine sparkled in his eyes and the bells jingled.
He told me that he had Amontillado, I trusted him and made him my friend, he said that He had a pipe of Amontillado, at first I did not believe him, there is no way he had a pipe of Amontillado in the middle of the Carnaval! But then he convinced me, I was drunk l I did not feel well, I was coughing and felt sick, but the Amontillado is worth it. Montresor was acting weird he kept asking me about my health, he told me that there are Nitre in the vault and that he does not want me to get sick, but I did not listen to him.
Edgar Allan Poe is most famous for the gothic themes he presents in his writings, this was no exception for Poe’s “The Cask of Amontillado”. Several important ideas are brought up about the story’s central theme of revenge. These ideas can be broken down into 3 parts: the incentive, the extent, and the reaction of the person partaking in revenge. It is essential to consider these ideas while reading Poe’s story, in order to comprehend his views on revenge. It also provides the reader the ability to question their own views on revenge as well as compare it with Poe’s.
“The Cask of Amontillado” is a classic short story by Edgar Allan Poe, based on true events to an extent. The story demonstrates a theme of revenge, as do the true events and the parodies made. Although, all forms get the primary storyline across. Examples beyond “The Cask of Amontillado” would be the music video for “A Little Too Late” by singer Toby Keith, “The Other Man in the Wall”, and “The Story Behind The Cask of Amontillado”. All of the previously-mentioned works have the same plot, yet contain a variation of characters.
Man has been known to be the cruellest animal on our planet and since we are at the top of the food chain we can do anything we want to our planet and also other people. Our kind is so cruel that we destroy our world for the need of resources and we can even be cruel to each other. Humans throughout history have always been at war with each other over land, greed, culture and revenge. Revenge and greed are both prominent in the short stories Stone Mattress and The Cask of Amontillado. Both of these short stories have great examples of greed and revenge in them and that they are similar but both are set differently.
This indicates that he had a difficult relationship with his father sometimes; he confides to the new owners, his mother would join him. “If she was in the mood, and we 'd plot together--oh, all forms of fantastical things". These lines suggest that both mother and son and possibly his sister as well were the victims of the masterful father. The basement was not a means of punishment for him as a child but instead a refuge from his abusive father. "A--controlled kind of place" wherever plants on the windowsill never perceived to bloom or maybe forever died”.
What gives the reader that feeling of being on the edge of their seat? Why would he want the reader to anticipate what’s going to happen next? That is how the author expresses tension. The author does this by using literary devices. Edgar Allen Poe builds suspense in “The Black Cat” by using specific literary devices—foreshadowing, allusion, and slow pace.
The Cask of Amontillado When it was carnival season I was trying to cut back on my wine addiction. “Monster at the moment comes and approaches me wearing a mask of black silk,” said fortunate. He then says,” I have acquired something that could pass for Amontillado.” Also at the time I was wearing a multicolored costume of jester and with a cone cap with bells. Montresor then tells me, “If you are too busy I will ask luchesi to taste it.
The fictional short story “The Cask of Amontillado” by Edgar Allan Poe takes place in the catacombs of Montresor’s palace, during the carnival’s climax. The story begins when Montresor, the villain of the story, vows revenge on Fortunato. Throughout the story, the author doesn't tell us what the revenge will be, but his choice of words in the details creates a mood in the reader. The author’s detailed description in the short story creates different moods in the reader like anger, satisfaction, curiosity, and victory because the chosen words connect with the audience.
In the story “The Cask of the Amontillado” by Edgar Allen Poe, the author beautifully sets the mood for a setting with his vivid details and exemplary diction whilst describing. The first location is described as “about dusk, one evening during… the carnival season”, with just these few simple words a picture has been painted for the reader of a joyous time, full of celebrations and happiness (Poe, 88). Montresor, the narrator, talks to his friend Fortunato, and tells him of a wine he’d like him to verify of its integrity. The two proceed to Montresor’s house, into his cellar. When Poe describes this location it’s an exceptional example of his imagery.
In Edgar Allan Poe’s short story “The Cask of Amontillado” and Zora Neale Hurston’s short story “Sweat” the two characters are consistently belittled by the antagonist in the stories. In “Sweat” Delia is an average housewife, but unfortunately she is in an abusive relationship with her husband named Sykes, who has a tendency to degrade Delia. Throughout the story, Sykes treats Delia horribly and towards the end of the story, Delia finally realizes that she has had enough of her abusive husband because he makes her feel as if she is not worth anything. Due to Sykes’ tendency to degrade her, Delia is considered to be a sympathetic character. The same kind of conflict affects the narrator in Edgar Allan Poe’s story “The Cask of Amontillado.”