Comparing The Cask Of Amontillado And The Black Cat's Death

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While reading the “The Black Cat”, I gasped audibly at the narrator’s crimes. “The Black Cat” and “The Cask of Amontillado” by Edgar Allan Poe are short but incredibly suspenseful stories. They are set in different locations and, aside from being gruesome, do not appear to be similar on the surface. They do, however, share three major likenesses. In both stories, alcohol and pride are factors in the downfalls of one of the main characters. While the crime in “The Cask of Amontillado” takes place in a catacomb and “The Black Cat” in a house, the victims in both stories are hidden behind walls built in a cold, dark, and damp area. Lastly, both villains acknowledge their actions but place accountability on another character rather than accepting the blame for their horrific deeds. These two stories could even be said to be a window into Poe’s dark and twisted life and mind. …show more content…

In “The Black Cat”, it takes slightly longer to reach the root of the narrator’s complete change in mentality and behavior but eventually, it becomes quite clear that alcohol abuse has caused his madness. In both stories, pride causes the ruin of either the villain or the victim. In “The Cask of Amontillado”, it is Fortunato’s boastful pride that lures him into the catacombs to analyze the wine. He is eager to prove his expertise and in doing so, willing to risk his health by entering the cold, damp vaults covered in nitre (potassium nitrate). In “The Black Cat”, the narrator, who’s name is never given, has almost gotten away with the crime. Just as the police are leaving the basement, he proudly slaps the wall while bragging about the sturdiness and arouses the cat he trapped with his dead

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