Similarities In Edgar Allan Poe And The Masque Of The Red Death

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Similarities in Edgar Allan Poe Stories

Poe was a very experienced author of unique tales. He was born on January 19, 1809 and died on October 7, 1849. He had a dark life growing up because his mother, foster mother, and his wife died from tuberculous. His father abandoned him and his foster father disliked him. This background may have greatly influenced his work. He wrote 70 poems and 66 short stories during his lifetime. Poe has written many Gothic horror stories. “The Tell Tale Heart,” “The Masque of the Red Death,” and “The Fall of the House of Usher” show these similarities. “The Fall of the House of Usher,” “The Mask of the Red Death,” and “The Tell-Tale Heart” all have isolated settings. The events in a castle, a decrepit …show more content…

The mood is set in “The Mask of the Red Death” initially by the narrator’s description of the bloody dead and dying. It is a horror scene. “There were sharp pains, and sudden dizziness, and then profuse bleeding at the pores, with dissolution.” Fear of the Red Death caused Prospero and his wealthy friends to isolate themselves for safety. The black room with the “blood tinted panes” and ghastly images added to the spooky feeling as did the sight and sound of the “Ebony clock.” The mood in the “Fall of the House of Usher” is also established by the setting. With the narrator’s first glimpse of the scene, he felt that “a sense of insufferable gloom pervaded my spirit.” The reflection of the mansion in the tarn increased his impression that had “terror as its basis.” The mood of terror and suspense is created in “The Tell-Tale Heart” with the narrator’s description of his plan to kill a man “who never wronged me” because of his “eye of a vulture.” The setting where the murderer opened the old man’s door while he slept increases the sense of fear and …show more content…

In “The Fall of the House of Usher” the gloomy house was symbolic of the Ushers and their own isolation. The narrator’s first impression was symbolic of events to come. He felt “a depression of the soul… a sinking, sickening of the heart.” He found Roderick to be “a bounden slave… to an anomalous species of terror.” In “The Tell Tale Heart” the narrator’s description of his isolated observation of the old man night after night increases the sense of terror, especially for the victim. The symbol was the old man’s “evil eye”. Another symbol was the sound of the beating heart that caused him to rush to kill the man. Fear sent Prospero and his friends into hiding in one of his secluded abbeys to escape the Red Death. Terror is evident from the narrator’s description of the dying. That fear was in the hearts of all who attempted to find “security within.” There are many symbols in the story like the eight rooms that represented the stages of life. The black room represented the final stage of life. The sound of the ebony clock that caused the masqueraders nervously to “pause” was like a foreshadowing. The “masked figure” in the Red Death mask was a symbol of death for all who hid from

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