The Theme Of Confession In The Black Cat By Edgar Allan Poe

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This same theme of perversity and guilt-ridden confession can be seen in another one of Poe’s short stories, The Black Cat. Although the story begins normally, a wife and husband with multiple pets, it does not stay that way. It is possible to interpret the Pluto and the new cat as the narrator’s conscience. Both cats are representations of the narrator’s conscience because of how it never died. Pluto was replaced by the new cat which became a constant reminder of what he did to Pluto. The similarities between Pluto and the new cat brings him to say, “it had at length, assumed a rigorous distinctness of outline. It was now the representation of an object that I shudder to name” (Poe 3). Eventually he gives into the guilt that is he is reminded of by the new cat. Some might think the perverseness is the new cat but upon further analysis, the guilt that the narrator feels due to his …show more content…

The narrator tells us the reason he kills the old man is because of his “vulture eye” (Poe 1). Once the deed is done, he “smiled gaily” (Poe 2). The murder was solely because of the amount of adrenaline he had. Right before the narrator murders the man he claims that he can hear the heart beating of the old man. Obviously this is impossible and the readers know that. The heart he could hear was in fact his own. Because of his adrenaline, his heart's beats were growing faster and louder. Similarly at the end of the story, the narrator tells the police that he can hear “the beating of his hideous heart” (Poe 3). He believes that he can hear the dead man’s heart when it is actually his adrenaline rising again. He assumes the sound is coming from the man because he refuses to acknowledge his insanity. His conscience told him that the heart beating will be the reason he gets caught. The guilt and adrenaline played a huge role in the confession and perversity of the

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