Madness in Poe’s 'The Tell-Tale Heart'

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The Merriam-Webster Dictionary describes mad as “having or showing severe mental illness” (“Mad.”). Does a person who truly is mad know that he or she is mad? The narrator of Edgar Allen Poe’s “The Tell-Tale Heart” must have understood that was how he was perceived to be. He questions the reader saying, “but why will you say that I am mad?” (“The Tell-Tale Heart.”). He then, brags to the reader of the calmness through which he tells his story. It seems to be that the narrator's sole goal is to convince the reader that he is sane- despite his disease. His disease is never directly named, but he does give the reader hints as to what his disease affects. To understand his disease, one must first learn his story.. The narrator speaks of an old

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