The Black Cat Mood

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Have you ever been home alone and heard a door open? Then you picture robbers breaking into your home when really it was just the wind? Well, the human imagination can turn sounds into horrifying images, sometimes much worse than what is actually happening. Poe used a lot of sensory language to create awful images in both "The Tell-Tale Heart" and "The Black Cat" to create a disturbing mood. Poe mostly used hearing and sounds when telling his stories. He wanted to make a disturbing mood with frightening sounds which could be interpreted as much worse than they actually are. One example of this, is in "The Tell-Tale Heart" when the Old Man was lying awake at night and groans. "I heard a slight groan, and I knew it was the groan of moral terror." He thinks that the groan means that the man is thinking of excuses to …show more content…

It could what the narrator described or it could just be that he was scared that someone was trying to hurt him in the middle of the night. An example of hearing from "The Black Cat" is when the narrator first heard the cat scream in the wall. "By a cry, at first muffled and broken, like the sobbing of a child, and the quickly swelling into one long, loud, and continuous scream." The narrator describes in detail of what the scream sounded like. He acted like it was one of the worst things he ever heard in the world but to most people, they wouldn't have thought about what the scream sounded like, they would ask themselves why the cat screamed in the first place. The narrator only made it seem terrifying because he was terrified of the cat itself. Another example from "The Back Cat" is how he connects the cats scream to hell. "A wailing shriek, half of horror and half of triumph, such as might have arisen only out of hell." He mentions hell because Pluto's name means the God of Hell and the narrator wants Pluto and the other black cat to be

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