“The Tell-Tale Heart”

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“The Tell-Tale Heart” by Edgar Allan Poe is a first-person narrative short story that features a disguised-cum-mysterious narrator. The narrator does not reveal any interest while proving his innocence regarding the murder of the old man. Moreover, he makes us believe that he is in full control of his mind but yet suffering from a disease that causes him over acuteness of the senses. As we go through the story, we can find his obsession in proving his sanity. The narrator lives with an old man, who has a clouded, pale blue, vulture-like eye that makes him so vulnerable that he kills the old man. He confesses that there was no interest, no passion whatsoever in killing the old man, whom he loved. Throughout the story, the narrator directs us towards how he courageously ends up committing a horrifying murder and dismembering the corpse into pieces. Consequently, we can behold that the conventional definition of ‘irony’ is met; he tries to convince the readers about his fully sane state of mind but in turn, ends up exposing his utmost insanity. The narrator of “The Tell-Tale Heart” who claims to be sane is in fact trying to get away with the punishment for the crime that he readily admits by faking insanity through ironic means.

Edgar Allan Poe, the writer himself is the one who establishes the irony in this story, not the narrator because the latter seems to be completely insensible about the ironic component of his monologue. The convention critical analysis of "The Tell-Tale Heart" might engage the story from the point of view that the narrator's attempt to prove his sanity might be an exercise in irony. Irony, in today’s world, can be easily misinterpreted by most of us because we tend to get confused with it taking it like not...

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Works Cited
Baraban, Elena V. “The Motive for Murder in "The Cask of Amontillado" by Edgar Allan Poe” Rocky Mountain Review of Language and Literature 58.2 (2004): 47-62

Gargano, James W. ‘‘The Theme of Time in ‘The Tell-Tale Heart.’’’ Studies in Short Fiction 5.4 (1967): 378-382.

Poe, Edgar Allan. “The Tell-Tale Heart.” Anthology of American Literature. Ed. McMichael, George, et al. New Jersey, 2007

Tresch, John. “The Potent magic of Verisimilitude: Edgar Allan Poe within the Mechanical Age” The British Journal for the History of Science 30.3 (1997): 257-290

Tucker, B.D. “The Tell Tale Heart” and the “Evil Eye”. The Southern Literary Journal 13.2 (1981):92-98. University of North Carolina Press

Cleman, John. “Irresistible Impulses: Edgar Allan Poe and the Insanity Defense”. American Literature 63.4 (1991): 623-640. Duke University Press

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