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Elements Of Suspense In Edgar Allan Poe's The Black Cat

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Enjoyment of horror fiction is a universal pastime that most people outgrow. Although most view recreational fear as childish, one can appreciate the literary skills of the writer in order to enjoy the genre. Elements of suspense, dramatic irony, and the like define a well-written horror piece. Edgar Allan Poe's The Black Cat demonstrates the literary horror elements of mood, suspense, character, and the uncanny. The general mood throughout Poe’s The Black Cat is frightening and evokes an uneasy feeling in the reader. The narrator prefaces the story by telling the reader that, “For the most wild, yet most homely narrative which I am about to pen, I neither expect nor solicit belief” (1). This at first excites the reader, but also leaves a feeling of uneasiness due to the uncertainty of the nature of the story. However, the narrator quickly reveals the story does not end well for him when he says, “But to-morrow I die, and to-day I would unburthen my soul” (1). The mood of The Black Cat is also developed in the horror element of character and the uncanny. Poe’s use of dreary details exhibit the frightening mood of The Black Cat. Suspense is arguably the most important horror element of the story; the narrator begins by telling the reader that he does not expect the reader to believe his story and says he is about to die, but does not provide an explanation (1). After killing Pluto, the narrator claims he was overcome by the “spirit of perverseness,” which leads

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