Compare And Contrast The Fall Of The House Of Usher

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In “The Fall of the House of Usher” by Edgar Allan Poe, a man named Roderick Usher sent an urgent letter to the narrator- an old childhood friend, asking him to come to his home to keep him company. Roderick explained he has a nervous illness and would appreciate the presence of a supportive friend. Even though the narrator only remembers Usher as a childhood memory, he immediately left to go see him. His time at the House of Usher was terrifying. After always seeing the house as a mystery from the outside and knowing that their family always ended in an “unsatisfactory conclusion,” (Poe 2706) the narrator experienced the disturbing trapped inside life of Roderick Usher and his twin sister, Madeline. The Usher twins are the very, very similar in the broad sense of their ages, they are both ill, and are disturbing characters. Even though Poe shared few specific details shared about them, after closely analyzing the twins, they seem to be very opposite. Roderick’s illness has a chance of going away, but Madeline’s illness is long term. She has a permanent physically disturbing appearance to her, but Roderick is mentally and emotionally disturbing. His personality changes in minutes from being manic to being very depressed. The …show more content…

Madeline died a couple days after the narrator arrived, so Roderick temporarily buried the body in the basement of their home. He did this because he had a fear of doctors taking her body if it was above ground to research her rare condition. Roderick on the other hand doesn’t leave the house because he suffers from a superstitious nature. He feels like he can’t leave the building and the ugly features of it has somehow affected his condition. Just like how the mansion is rotting, it is rotting his own spirit. The narrator said when he was in their home, “I felt like I breathed an atmosphere of sorrow”

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