Themes Of Death In 'The Masque Of The Pit And The Bells' By Edgar Allan Poe

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The American Author Edgar Allan Poe wrote short stories and poems in the mid-1800s until his death in 1849. Common themes in Poe 's works are death, fear, man and the natural world, versions of reality, and mortality, seen in the short stories The Masque of the Red Death and The Pit and the Pendulum, and in the poems Annabel Lee and The Bells each of these themes can have a different meaning in each story or poem. Such as in The Masque of the Red Death mortality is seen through death as more of a natural force instead of an evil one, while in Annabel Lee mortality is seen through death as more of an evil force instead of a natural one. These themes are depicted differently through each story, they may be intertwined with one another or feed on one another to help one of them grow. The themes in The Masque …show more content…

The theme of versions of reality is seen through the narrator who at the end of the story tells us that he can no longer believe that anything he has seen is not real. This story is unstable as it takes place in an “other space” where not even the dimensions of the room can be established, and if one cannot even know the room how can one know anything? The theme of death in this story is the main point, as it is on the narrator’s mind from the very beginning to the final moments, this makes the readers ponder death and what all it could entail. The constant morbidity of this story only for it to end in life makes one question if death should even be considered a theme in the first place. With the theme of fear through this story being a heavy constant it makes the reader ponder what it is that they fear and why they fear it. With something as inconsequential as being thirsty striking fear into the narrator it makes one wonder what they would do if they were in this situation. This is the type of story with the themes to make the reader really think and question

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