The Tell-Tale Heart Innocent

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“The Tell-Tale Heart” is a famous short story written by Edgar Allan Poe that brought him world acclaim. In this short story, the narrator insists on telling the reader that he is not crazy and he is able to “prove” it. At the beginning he lets the reader know that he does have a disease but instead of it holding him back, it allows him to go further. Throughout the story, the narrator is terrorized by the old man’s pale blue eye and claims he can hear his beating heart and is determined to get rid of it. To stop the intimidation and being able to hear his heart, the narrator took it upon himself to murder the old man and even then that wasn’t enough. The body was chopped up to pieces but the narrator was still able to “hear” his heart; “Yes! Yes, I killed him. Pull up the boards and you shall see! I killed him. But why does his heart not stop beating?! Why does it not stop!?” (3). Although the narrator pleaded guilty to the officers, he is innocent of homicide …show more content…

According to the legal dictionary First degree murder is defined as an unlawful killing that is willing and premeditated. While the narrator did deliberately kill the old man, he has a disease that impairs his judgment. The narrator of this story is schizophrenic and the use of a first person narrator allows the reader to see into his mind. Some symptoms that the narrator shows are hallucinations, delusions and different movements. The hallucinations that the narrator seems to be having are auditory ones where he claims he can hear the beating of the old man's heart and no one else is able to hear it. With schizophrenia, the person is unable to tell the difference between what is reality and what isn’t (Cambridge English Dictionary). It starts in the beginning of the story where the narrator tells us, “Above all was the sense of hearing acute. I heard all things of heaven and in the

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