Edgar Allan Poe's Short Stories Create Plausible Horror Essay

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Do Edgar Allan Poe’s short stories create plausible horror? This is debatable among people. Some do not believe some of Poe’s short stories to be filled with horror. It is just how one perceives it. It is obvious that his stories do contain characters with disturbed psyches; such as in his stories, “The Cask of Amontillado” and “The Fall of the House of Usher.” Edgar Allan Poe was not the first writer of his time to write horror stories. Horace Walpole and Charles Brockman Brown both had popularized horror stories by Poe’s time. However, these horror stories were often ignored by critics. They were not popular and had to be written in magazines and newspapers. The horror genre soon became an important part of literature that Poe has changed …show more content…

Montressor gave Fortunato multiple chances to escape his death but Fortunato was too prideful. We are told from Elena V. Barban that Montressor did not commit the perfect murder because he had pity on Fortunato. The reader is baffled to find no motive for revenge. There is no logical explanation for Montressor’s hatred toward Fortunato, so the reader must conclude that Montressor is insane (Barban). “The Cask of Amontillado” is clearly another example of Poe’s stories with characters having disturbed …show more content…

Regardless of what people think Poe did or did not do, he did change the face of literature through some of his short horror stories. Two of his stories that were discussed within this paper are, “The Cask of Amontillado” and “The Fall of the House of Usher.” Within these two stories Edgar Allan Poe has given it a horror reading, with descriptive places, such as “wet and gloomy” and “evil atmosphere.” Besides the stories giving off a sense of horror, they also contain characters with disturbed psyches. The character with a disturbed psyche in “The Cask of Amontillado” was Montressor. He got revenge by murdering Fortunato, who ruined his self-esteem. He bricked Fortunato in alive in the catacombs and walked away feeling pity on him but knowing what he had done and having to live with it. In “The Fall of the House of Usher,” Roderick Usher was distracted by his thoughts knowing he buried his sister alive within the vaults of their home. She got out of the encasement, Roderick and the narrator placed her in, and attacked Roderick in her bloody

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