Montresor is the kind of person that you don’t want get on their bad side, He's the kind of person that enjoys long walks on the beach and the occasional MURDER. In the story "Cask of Amontillado" written by Edgar Allen Poe, Montresor is main Character/Narrator, and his main goal in the story is to seek revenge on his once good friend Fortunato who has embarrassed Montresor one to many times. So Montresor's plan is to trick Fortunato down into his family's catacomb by telling Fortunato that there is a cask of amontillado in the catacombs. So Fortunato follows Montresor down into the catacombs where he chains Fortunato in a niche in the wall and seals him in with brick and mortar. As you can see Montresor successfully kills Fortunato because he's an unsympathetic character with a dark demeanor and an unhealthy mental state. …show more content…
Well you got to have some sorts of brains to pull of a murder that hasn’t be solved in over a decade right. As you can tell this was a premeditated murder as he had bricks and mortar hidden to inclose Fortunato in the wall. Also he devised a brilliant plan based on the way he knew fortunato. Although it was probably a lot easy to kill Fortunato since he's definitely not the sharpest tool in the shed.
Is Montresor a villain? Well you can definitely see that Montresor is not the good guy in the story, and he shows that he is alright with murder. Montresor coat of arms is a "A huge human foot d'or, in a field Azure; the foot crushes a serpent rampant whose fangs are imbedded in the heel," and the motto is "Nemo me impune lacessit." Which also shows that he comes from a family that doesn’t take things too well. Montresor also tries to savor the death of fortunato by making little puns toward Fortunato and using irony. Which also shows that he might be bragging to
Montresor is an evil person because he killed a man. In the story Montresor says ¨There were no attendants at home; they had absconded to make merry in honor of the time. I had told them that I should not return until the morning, and had given them explicit orders not to stir from the house.¨ (Poe, 210) Montresor did not decide to kill Fortunato in the moment. He knew that he would kill him before he did it. This is revealed in the story, when Montresor orders his servants to leave his home, so there would be no witnesses to his plan. Another example to prove this is that Montresor brought a trowel with him into catacombs so that he could seal Fortunato into the wall with bricks and the trowel is used to spread mortar onto the bricks. People
Poe starts out with a man, by the name of Montresor, wanting revenge on another man, named Fortunato. Most of the story takes place deep in the Montresor family catacombs. As Montresor lures Fortunato into the catacombs, he chains Fortunato up to a small hole in a wall, bricks it over, and leaves Fortunato to die. Even through the traits of anger, hatred, and revenge, as the story progresses on, Montresor, the main character in “The Cask of Amontillado”, starts to show signs of feeling guilty for wanting to murder Fortunato.
Moreover, another trait of Montresor's that helps him to plan the perfect murder is his deceitfulness. In the rising action, Montresor tricks Fortunato down into the depths of his catacombs, where he plans to perform the horrible, horrific, homicide . Montresor tells
In “The Cask of Amontillado”, Montresor is guilty of the cold-blooded murder of Fortunato and should go to jail for his crime. Montresor speaks of the “thousand injuries” Fortunato caused him and, more recently, the “insult” that Montresor cannot forgive. Vowing to seek retribution, Montresor comments on the importance of ensuring his own innocence throughout the process of revenge. He goes out of his way to be friendly to Fortunato. Other evidence that supports the crime as being preconceived includes Montresor preying on Fortunato’s weakness, his love of wine and his conceited nature. He praises Fortunato on his knowledge of wine and taunts him with the full barrel that he just purchased asking him for his expert opinion. In preparation
Vengeance and murder infects the minds of Montresor and Fortunato upon an exchange of insult in Edgar Allan Poe’s "The Cask of Amontillado”. This is the story of pure revenge after Forturano disrespects Montresor. The story follows the characters meeting up at a carnival and eventually the disguised Montresor lures Fortunato into the catacombs of his home by convincing him that he acquired something that could pass for Amontillado, a light Spanish sherry. Fortunato grows eager to taste this wine and to determine for Montresor whether or not it is truly Amontillado. He leads him back to the catacombs of his home and carries out his plot to bury him alive. Edgar Allan Poe writes from a mysterious first person perspective, uses colorful symbolism and situational irony to present the man's inner self, in turn revealing that revenge is fundamentally infeasible.
From the very beginning of the story, one can obviously see that Montresor thinks that he has been wronged by Fortunato. His plan for vengeance is easily seen through his actions and his thoughts. "He had a weak
When looked at for the first time, Montresor in Edgar Allan Poe’s The Cask of Amontillado may seem disturbing. Montresor has plans to murder a man, Fortunato, for insulting him and plans on doing so by walling him up in the catacombs under his home. Montresor devises a clever plan that will leave Fortunato clueless as to his intensions. Upon a closer look, this character is admirable. Montresor carries out his plan successfully without being caught. He does this by using traits that are commendable at the very least. Montresor is Poe’s most admirable character because he is patient, extremely confident, and very calculated.
Montresor is a cold and calculating killer, he knows exactly what he is doing the whole time he is leading Fortunato in the catacombs. This character is dark, disturbed and pretty much a sociopath. He feels no empathy, he despises injustice, and he holds no qualms about killing to right the injustices done against him.
Montresor stages the murder as an execution that way Fortunato knew who had killed him, but Montresor’s action were seen as perversity rather than revenge by the lack of using the insult Fortunato had given him as his last
Continuing on, the intolerance that Montresor has when it comes to Fortunato plays a major role in the act Montresor is responsible for. In the inciting incident, Montresor is reaving his opinion towards Fortunato. “The man Fortunato had done me a thousand wrongs. I bore them as best I could. But when he began to insult me I vowed revenge” (Poe 67). This cite portrays Montresor as an intolerant man who won’t tolerate insults. From this I can conquer that Montresor is plotting something incredibly horrid, as if a supervillain from an old superhero television show. Furthermore, the intolerance Montresor contains is shown again deeper into the rising action, Montresor restates his family motto, as though he was give a heroic speech. This claim
Along with being unreliable he also has a moral weakness of the desire of vengeance through his cunning ways. The undependable narrator states that Fortunato has put Montresor through a “thousand injuries” which he borne the best he could until ”(Fortunato) ventured upon insult (he) vowed revenge” (page #). With Montresor's deceiving ways and with Fortunato being intoxicated Montresor gets his revenge by essentially burying Fortunato alive. Montresor is essentially psychotic, but in his mind, he is helping himself and others by getting rid of Fortunato. His moral weakness goes away once the killing of Fortunato was completed, but he lives in sorrow along with the wife of Fortunato.
Although Montresor starts the story about his vow for revenge against Fortunato, I would have never thought that he would go to the levels of insanity as he does in this story. In my opinion, Montresor did an excellent job with the planning of Fortunato’s death. Although it was not uncalled for, considering we were never told why Montresor vowed such extreme revenge on Fortunato, the whole scheme and deception was put together excellently and well executed.
In Edgar Allan Poe’s short story “The Cask of Amontillado”, the main character, Montresor is actually a villain, even though he doesn’t think of himself as one. For instance, the author has Montresor show clear distaste to Fortunato, but never explains why. In the beginning of the story, Montresor describes Fortunato as a terrible person who he “must not only punish but punish with impunity”, even though Montresor never explains what Fortunato has done. The reason the author did this is to suggest that the Montresor doesn’t even have a reason for torturing and trapping Fortunato behind a wall, which makes Montresor seem like a monster. In addition to this, Montresor also showed characteristics of a villain when he was using irony while
Montresor’s actions lend to his vengeful and manipulative nature. He lures Fortunato into the catacombs of his home to carry out his plans to kill Fortunato. In the first step of his plan, he boosts Fortunato’s ego by saying that Luchesi was almost as worthy a judge of wine as he. Then Montresor tricks Fortunato into believing that there is an
As for Montresor, he acts calmly from beginning to end. First, he wants to take revenge on Fortunato and plots it carefully in order to avoid the punishment. He knows his “enemy” very well, from Fortunato’s interests to his weakness, so he can easily kill Fortunato. During the process of murder, he is really calm and controlled. Step by step, he lures Fortunato to his gloomy cellar and kills Fortunato. He works in a place filled with bones and feels no terror. He even stops his “labour” just to hear Fortunato’s cry with “more satisfaction”. Though “for a brief moment [he] hesitated, [he] trembled”, he does not tremble for guilt but for the worry that Fortunato may escape. After Montresor take the revenge successfully, he feels satisfied and pleasant. The differences on their psychological changes create a terrified atmosphere which makes readers suffocate.