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Examples Of Imagery In The Fall Of The House Of Usher

Decent Essays

In “The Fall of the House of Usher,” Edgar Allen Poe challenges the reader to discover the role of fear. Poe’s creation gives off multiple feelings of apprehension; therefore making the true reality of his piece unclear. Set in a disturbing environment, Poe uses gruesome imagery and mentally unstable characters to bring out fear, and raises questions of fear’s ability to alter perception. When the narrator first approaches the House of Usher, he takes the time to observe all of the house’s features. On a “dull, dark and soundless day” he scans the eerie landscape, eventually noticing the “barely perceptible fissure” crossing down the house “ in a zigzag direction” (308, 312). At first the narrator does not seem to notice the crack running …show more content…

When the narrator first reunites with Usher he describes him to have “a cadaverous of complexion,” and “an eye large, liquid, and luminous beyond comparison” (313). The narrator has not seen his friend in many years, and his first time seeing him is a little appalling. Usher is sick, he is very skinny, and has an eye that stands out. Usher’s appearance is horrifying enough that the first time seeing him, would make any observer queasy. The narrator’s perception is questionable; it is impossible to know for certain if he is indeed describing the reality since his mind is disturbed by Usher’s appearance. As he begins to spend more time with Usher and his house, he begins to see a similarity between the two siblings; a similarity in which he “ did not [arrest his] attention” to earlier (319). When the narrator first arrived at the House of Usher, he was very unsure and fearful of what was going to happen, but now that he has gotten a little used to the house, he is beginning to see things a little clearer. The fear affects his ability to trust his own perception, but as he becomes more acquainted with his surroundings, his vision is not as cloudy. At the very end of the story moments before the house falls, Usher and the narrator find Lady Madeline “trembling and reeling to and fro upon the threshold” (325). To the narrator, Lady Madeline dies and is put in an entombment; now she is

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