The Cask Of Amontillado Analysis

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The short story “The Cask of Amontillado” by Edgar Allen Poe tells the story of Montresor seeking revenge on Fortunato. Montresor does not specify what is exactly said that makes him commit premeditated murder. He mentions that it was an insult that turned him towards revenge the moment he heard it. He becomes obsessed with punishing Fortunato. Poe uses elements of horror to illustrate Montresor’s obsession for revenge leading to the death. Fortunato insults Montresor which leads Montresor to over analyze what is said. As time goes by he becomes increasingly offended by it. He states, “At length I would be avenged; this was a point definitively settled- but the very definitiveness with which it was resolved, precluded the idea of risk” (Poe …show more content…

He has examined every detail so that he can complete his revenge without getting caught. Montresor exploits Fortunato’s interest in wines, especially the Amontillado. To make sure that Fortunato follows him without being questioned, he intoxicates him with liquor. He uses the excitement of finding the Amontillado to lure Fortunato to the catacombs of the Montresors. In order to ensure that none of his servants wonder where he is, he says, “I told them that I should not return until the morning” (145). He takes advantage of the excitement of the carnival season to distract his servants of his absence. Without the interruption of his servants, Montresor leads Fortunato into the depths of his family crypt. It is a private space to which only he has access to. It is a secluded place where the screams of Fortunato cannot be …show more content…

Instead, he plans to wall him up while he is still alive. Montresor claims, “I had completed the eighth, ninth, and the tenth tier. I had finished a portion of the last and eleventh tier” (Poe 147). Not only is Fortunato being walled in by eleven layers he is also chained. This act reveals how sinister Montresor is. He has to make sure that there is no way Fortunato can survive. He does this to avoid being insulted by him again. When he calls out to see if he is still alive the answer he receives is, “There came forth in return only a jingling of bells” (Poe 148). He does not feel any form of remorse and hurries out of the catacombs because the damp air is making him feel sick. His lack of remorse comes from his sense of accomplishment. He succeeded in his plan for

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