Beyond what meets the eye in Poe's Horror Tale

524 Words2 Pages

In “The Fall of the House of Usher,” by Edgar Allan Poe the paragraphs at the beginning, really sets the mood to rest of the story and is pretty effective for what is to come. The mood is creepy, sinister, and horror type, both in the sound and words, helping create this atmosphere. It does this by using very complex and gloomy vocabulary. The author exaggerated this story to show a problem that people all have within them. Which in this case, is that one has madness inside them. The narrator went to Rodrick's Ushers house in pity after receiving a letter from him. Once the narrator arrives he spends most of the time describing the house as having a feeling of, “iciness, a sinking, a sickening of the heart” (1553). However, as the narrator goes inside, his views of the house worsens, “An air of stern, deep, and irredeemable gloom hung over and pervaded all”(1555), of the house. Afterward, he meets Rodrick Usher who start babbling nonsense, “I feel that I must inevitably abandon life and reason together in my struggles with some fatal demon of fear”(1556). This is the first sign of m...

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