The Masque Of The Red Death By Edgar Allan Poe

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Poe and Hawthorne are two American writers who have defined literature as we know it today. Both brought the standards for short stories to a whole new level never seen before. Poe’s writing style sought out to leave the reader with a single effect and or message conveyed through the story. However Hawthorne placed more emphasis on the authors view of the world around him. These forward and evolutionary thoughts changed the way people today appreciate the languages present in the writings. Hawthorne and Poe were so evolutionary because of their use of different themes, symbols, characterization and most importantly the settings of the stories themselves. The coolest part about these authors is how they each uniquely presented romantic and gothic themes differently in the same short story format. …show more content…

In Poe’s “The Masque of the Red Death”, symbolism in both dark and light forms was represented. The shadows caused by the fire illuminate the rooms, to the dark clock on the wall in the black room that was ticking away the time the revelers had left to live. Poe compares and contrasts Death (Darkness) and Life (Light) in a very subtle and yet creative way. In “The Minister’s Black Veil” by Hawthorne dark and light imagery are also present in the story. The most important dark symbol in the story came from the black veil that Mr. Hopper wears to symbolize a from of bad sin. The opposite light symbolism comes in less obvious forms during the story, like in the metaphor of a smile being a flame or flickering of a light, which makes you question if the truth is as dark as it is assumed to be by the

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