Death In Edgar Allan Poe: The Theme Of Death

1001 Words3 Pages

The Theme of Death

You can run like Usain Bolt, you can be as smart as Einstein, but no matter what you do, you can never escape death. In the story The Masque of the Red Death, a group of selfish and self-centered nobles and wealthy snobs lock themselves in Prince Prospero’s mansion in order to avoid a tragic death from an infectious disease, while millions of civilian lives are being lost from the plague right outside their locked doors. These self-righteous scums are enjoying their everyday isolated lives, until one day, the figure of death roams the house, eventually killing everybody inside. Edgar Allan Poe uses characters like Prince Prospero, and symbolic items such as the rooms of the mansion and the ebony clock to establish an ominous …show more content…

Once he heard news of a plague that is killing thousands of people in his city, he gathers up his family and friends and locks himself away to shield himself from his potential demise. A few weeks later, the figure of death murders the prince and all of his wealthy followers. This is an excellent symbol of Edgar’s loathing for self-righteousness. The prince thought he and his friends are better than everybody else, and they do not care about anybody but themselves, which leads to them dying a horrific death. “The Prince bore aloft a dagger, turned suddenly, and confronted his pursuer” (Poe 4). The prince believes he is superior to the shadowy figure and grabs him, and then moments later falls dead to the floor. Edgar Allan Poe also uses the prince to prove that every man, woman, and child on this earth will eventually …show more content…

The rooms in the house are arranged in such a specific way, so that Poe could convey his message of doom and inevitable death. “The apartments were so irregularly disposed that the vision embraced but little more than one at a time” (Poe 1). Every room is connected to the other, and the rooms have odd twists and turns, which only allow a guest to see a small fraction of the room in front of them. This is a symbol of how us humans can only see small parts of the future. We may know what we are doing in an hour, tomorrow, or maybe even next year, but a person can never truly know what will happen in their distant future. Even the colors of the rooms have significant meaning. “The eastern extremity in blue, the second chamber in purple, the third was green, the fourth was furnished and lighted with orange, the fifth was white, the sixth with violet” (Poe1). Every room is colored differently and every color is symbolic. The blue room, which is furthest to the east, represents birth. The color blue stands for the "unknown" from which a human being comes into the world. Purple is a representation of the beginning of growth, which makes sense since it is the room following a room where birth is symbolized. The color green is a representation of balance and harmony, and to me, that sounds like a time in your life where things seem orderly and well under control. The next color is orange, which is hand in

Open Document