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Analysis OfThe Black Cat By Edgar Allen Poe, And Prey

Decent Essays

It is human nature to take the things we have for granted. The short stories The Black Cat by Edgar Allen Poe, The Raven by Edgar Allen Poe, and Prey by Richard Matheson are three exquisite gothic works that embody the themes of grotesqueness and curses and portray this message well; These pieces each have similar tone. In the short story The Black Cat by Edgar Allen Poe, the main character, who is unnamed, tells his story from a first person perspective about his perfect lifestyle and love for animals. Poe writes about the character slowly driving himself insane with obscure acts and thoughts and blaming the occurrences on others. This story portrays grotesqueness the most and begins when the main character “grasped the poor beast by the throat, and deliberately cut one of it’s eyes from its socket” (Poe 2) referring to his cat. The character continues to plummet into madness when he hangs the cat, then buys one similar to the one he killed, he kills his wife, and confidently lies to the police. His actions accurately describe the idea of grotesqueness. What acts as a catalyst in the story for the characters poor decisions, is that the first cat has cursed him. First, his house is burned down the same night that he hung the cat. The second cat he bought, had a patch of white fur that slowly grew to eventually form the outline of a noose. Finally, toward the end of the story, when the police are searching his new house for his missing wife, he mocked the police for not

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