The Black Cat By Edgar Allan Poe

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In “The Black Cat,” Poe uses different levels of conflict to slowly grow the reader’s disgust towards the narrator as each level of conflict becomes more gruesome and inhuman. Using phrases such as ‘deadly sin’ and ‘cruel deed’ highlight the appalling nature of the narrator’s killing of Pluto, creating a hellish image of the narrator and gradually decreasing the reader’s feeling of sympathy and creating feelings of horror. The narrator’s word choice in talking about the second cat, referring to it as ‘a brute beast’ and a ‘felon,’ enhance the lunacy of the narrator, developing him into an image of delusion and paranoia and building the contempt the reader feels toward him. The suddenness of the murder of his wife, simply ‘withdr[awing] [his]

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