The Fall Of The House Of Usher Analysis

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In “The Fall of the House of Usher” by Edgar Allan Poe, the death of Madeline and Roderick Usher represents the ending of something, and in this specific case, the ending of a generation. Throughout the story, it is made very clear that Madeline and Roderick are the last living people of the Usher generation. Roderick Usher explicitly states on page four, “‘Her decease,’ he said, with a bitterness which I can never forget, ‘would leave him (him the hopeless and the frail) the last of the ancient race of the Ushers.’” Therefore, when they both die at the end, it is clear that it is the end of a generation. The ending of their generation creates a depressing and serious feeling through this story due to the fact that the Usher’s will be no more. …show more content…

Death is represented a couple times throughout this story. The death of Sam’s wife Millie and the death of the slugs. The fact that Sam is killing slugs and collecting them portrays the way that he is trying to cope with the death of his wife Millie. This weird hobby he picked up after her death makes one think that he cannot get over her and is trying to get his mind off of what has happened. The way he kills the slugs is described as slow and painful, where the slugs are suffering. He may do this because he is angry of what has happened to Millie and wants to take out his anger on something that is helpless to his power. On page 34 Sam says, “I put bait out, and then every chance I get I come out here with this stuff. Bastards are all over. A crime what they can do. Look here.” The death portrayed here is depicted as painful and abstract. Why slugs? Why kill them in such a morbid way? Perhaps it is in order to claim his power to make himself feel like he can be in control of something, due to the fact that he can’t be in control of his feelings he has over the death of his wife. This representation also shows that marriage and death are very close. One moment you can be happily married, have a great group of friends, and the next, it is all taken away from you. The death of Millie portrays the end of a friendship between two couples. The end of a friendship …show more content…

In both stories, death does represent the end of something. To reiterate, the death of Madeline and Roderick Usher represent the end of their generation, while the death of Millie represents the end of a friendship. These endings not only function as a form of the plot but they also go beyond that point. The death of Madeline and Roderick serve as a way to understand what it is like for a generation to end. Because of Roderick’s depression and mental illness and Madeline’s health issues, they are no longer able to carry out the line of their family. It also creates an understanding of mental illnesses and how they can affect a person. Both Madeline and Roderick are affected and Roderick even starts to believe that the house has a control over his behavior. In “I Could See the Smallest Things,” the death of the slugs and Millie play bigger roles than just the plot as well. The death of Millie shows how people can be taken from your life so easily and so quickly without any warning. Her death was obviously not expected and goes to show that life is so delicate and can be taken away with a blink of an eye. The death of the slugs in this story goes farther than the plot as well. Yes, Sam has picked up a hobby of baiting slugs in, slowly killing them with ajax, and then collecting them in jars, however this shows how people can go to very odd places in order to cope with big changes or losses in their life. The deaths represented in

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