The Fall of the House of Usher by Edgar Allan Poe

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To begin with, Poe has carefully tailored the narrative in a manner to fit the theory of single effect. The unnamed narrator suggests that his main job is to narrate. His logical treatment and explanation of what happens throughout the story adds plausibility and credibility to the narrator. Darrel Abel described the narrator as “Anthropos” for he, the narrator, remains “uncharacterized, undescribed and even unnamed” (177). Although the reader does not know much about him, the attention is fully drawn instead to the strangeness in the House of Usher and the horror tour inside the house. Poe builds a strong connection between the narrator and the reader, “The reader represents Poe’s ideal narrator, and Poe’s narrator represents his ideal reader” (Bieganowski 185). To know how convincing the narrator is, one can see the important connection that the reader is expected to make, is that of Roderick to his sister Madeline. She is introduced passively as she walks by, not noticing the guest (Poe 1005). The narrator does not see her for long, and does not notice signs of the disease that supposedly has baffled her physicians for years (Poe 1005). Her brother is forced to explain to the narrator, the reader, all that we know about the girl, that her disease is so advanced and that we should never be afforded the opportunity to see her again living, which we later find out is not the case (Poe 1005). Kaplan explains that "As a personality Madeline is scarcely introduced at all. Like the House she is another manifestation of Usher himself..." (63). The unnamed narrator plays a key role in introducing the horror to the reader by the use of the first-person point of view, which is related through an outsider looking into a strange situatio... ... middle of paper ... ...ce him/her in strange locations insulating the action from any possible interference from normal society (John H. Timmerman 3). Darrel Abel argues that much of the horror of the tale is usually attributed to its setting “superficially considered” (176). It is used to suggest a mood to the reader which makes him properly receptive to the horrible ideas which grow in his mind during the action (ibid). Moreover, Poe also uses the setting to foreshadow events in the story. Roderick Usher's mansion is one example of this. There is a "barely perceptible fissure" (Poe 119) in the masonry. It is a small crack in "The House of Usher" which the narrator defines as "both the family and the family mansion." This foreshadows an event that will ruin the house and the family. The fissure divides the house. Roderick and Madeline die, destroying the family at the end of the story.

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