Hyperboles In The Tell-Tale Heart By Edgar Allen Poe

1013 Words3 Pages

Bleak, sinister, and dreary are often the words that come to mind when one thinks of Edgar Allen Poe’s literature. Poe is notorious for his morbid short stories and poems, in which he repeatedly tries to invoke the feelings of fear and suspense in his audience.“The Tell-Tale Heart” is a story about a ‘madman’ who takes the readers through his own act of cold-blooded murder. Poe uses repetition in order to build both suspense and anxiety and create the story’s mood. Poe also uses hyperboles, and word choice to disturb the reader.
Repetition is a key element in Poe’s literature; moreover, in “The Tell-Tale Heart” repeating words and phrases builds the overall feeling of suspense. He does this in a way similar to that of a horror or suspense movie which will often pair erie …show more content…

Throughout the story the narrator continues to try to persuade the audience that he is sane: “Madmen know nothing. But you should have seen me”(Poe 692). The narrator often uses hyperboles to prove his sanity. Moreover, the narrator also seems to believe that his hyperbolic claims are a reality, which strongly suggests that the narrator is mentally unstable. Poe’s narrator also builds suspense by using hyperboles about time and sound: “A single dim ray, like the thread of a spider”(Poe 693). Doing this creates a false sense of time and space, which gives the audience a feeling of uncertainty. The narrator provides us with examples of his ‘capabilities’,"I heard all things in the heaven and in the earth," as proof that he is mentally stable (Poe 691). He genuinely believes that his ‘heightened’ senses mean that he is sane or perhaps even more rational than his audience. This instead makes it clear to the audience that he is unstable, and that the story is being told from an unreliable source. Poe’s emphasis on the narrator’s insanity is useful in invoking dread and apprehension in his

Open Document