The day I seek my revenge was the day I thought about murder how hard it would be to get away with it. But I know how I was going to do it how I was going to end someone who caused me so much misery. Deep down I know it was right but who thinks when your emotions get in the way and some much hatred is in your soul. As time flies by I watch him in raged and it grow strong everyday inside of me know his time was numbered. I Waited till the Decoration was put up and the drinks were out Yes, I know the carnival was here I know how I would kill him. Fortunato know his fate would soon come after the pain he brought me. I would use the one thing that weakness his organs and put him in a vulnerable state the one thing he can’t resist …Wine. As He
Revenge is the action of inflicting hurt or harm on someone for an injury or wrong suffered at their hands.The short story, “The Cask of Amontillado,” by Edgar Allen Poe tells a tale of a man who let his need for revenge consume him. The central idea of the story is revenge. The author’s use of characterization helps us to develop the central idea and allows us to see the change in the characters as the revenge takes place.
Revenge is a common focal point in many short stories. “The Cask of Amontillado” by Edgar Allan Poe and “The Utterly Perfect Murder” by Ray Bradbury are two that come to mind when revenge is mentioned. The two have many similar characteristics that make the concepts they represent difficult to distinguish. While these two stories have many similarities, such as first person narration and a theme of revenge, they are also overrun with differences.
The famous writer, Louis L’Amour once said. “Anger is a killing thing.” L’Amour points can relate to the short story “The Cask of Amontillado” and the poem “The Poison Tree”. The Cask of Amontillado is a story of revenge where a man buries his enemy alive. The Poison Tree is a poem also about revenge where man kills his foe with a poison apple. Both works show that foe and friendship co-exist with revenge through metaphors.
Have you ever gotten so mad that you wanted to kill the person that mad you so angry? In Edgar Allan Poe's "Cask of Amontillado" Montressor, one of two main characters, did not feel satisfied after exacting his revenge because he did not find that finishing killing Fortunato, the other main character, was not as rewarding as to just keep torturing him. During the beginning when Montressor first took Fortunato into the catacombs Montressor loved tricking so he could lure Fortunato in the catacombs. When Montressor was torturing Fortunato he thought it was fun because Montressor was in total control of what happens to Fortunato. At the end when Fortunato is about to be left to die Montressor got a sick feeling because it brought back memories
Many people in today's world use revenge to satisfy their troubles or situations they are in. Often times people desire revenge so bad that it ends up driving them crazy. In the short story, ¨The Cask of Amontillado¨ by Edgar Allan Poe, this situation is displayed perfectly. A character by the name Fortunato triggered Montresor, which resulted in him developing a deeply thought out murder plan. This is why the theme, revenge can drive a person crazy, fits with this short story. This theme works because the author shows it through foreshadowing, verbal irony, and indirect characterization.
Revenge can be sweet, but in this case it is just down right grotesque! In Edgar Allen Poe’s “The Cask of Amontillado” it talks about a gentlemen named Montressor and how he is angry at Fortunato for insulting him in the past. Montressor will not let this go unpunished, so he thinks up a clever scheme to get back at him. This plan is in a way, ingenious but most definitely insane and crazy.
Francis Bacon once wrote “A man that studieth revenge keeps his wounds green, which otherwise would heal and do well.” Bacon is telling us that it really hurts the individual to hold a grudge and seek revenge. “The Cask of Amontillado” is a short story by the American poet, editor and story writer Edgar Allen Poe. This story is a tale of revenge touching on the darker sides of human nature and at what lengths a man will go to achieve vengeance. We are told by our narrator Montresor that he had been insulted by a wealthy wine connoisseur named Fortunato. Montresor picks him out of the carnival and lures him into his wine cellar with promise of a renown sherry wine, Amontillado. Fortunato is baited by the trap and follows Montresor to the
The concept of revenge is one very known to human nature. Most people are familiar with the desire to get payback, though often individuals choose not to act on it as it is often a more fleeting emotion than lasting fascination. Being such a relatable and commonplace affliction, this feeling is also central in many works of fiction. The Cask of Amontillado by Edgar Allan Poe and The Count of Monte Cristo by Alexandre Dumas both share a common plotline as they explore themes of betrayal, deception, and revenge. The protagonists, Montresor and Edmond respectively, both set out to seek revenge against those who they feel have done them wrong. The writing styles share a similar dark tone as the ideas of justice and deservingness are challenged through the characters’ actions.
The Cask of Amontillado, by Edgar Allan Poe. This story focuses on Montresor and his revenge of Fortunato. Montresor has many character traits that make him an interesting yet mysterious character in the story. His plot for revenge shows him as a person who can’t let something go, and must show what he wants in return. His knowledge of wine may not be the biggest trait, but an important one indeed, because of the pride that he takes in it.
Change is inevitable. Whether it be positive or negative, change is constantly happening. More than often change can take you from the known world and spit you into the unknown, where you return a changed person. While embarking on the journeys provoked by change, you are on a hero’s journeys. The hero’s journey was popularized by Joseph Campbell. When describing what prompts hero’s journeys, Joseph Campbell said,
Honestly, I think that this short-story was a little bit dramatic and sounded like the narrator wasn’t done telling the short-story. Honestly, I think that the first-person needs to have more detail to the story. I think that the narrator could have done a better job for the short-story. Overall, the narrator needs to have a more work done, and the point-of-view needs to have a little more detail to the story to make the story a little bit more better. Also, his justification for his revenge I think it has been going on for more then 50
The term Quinceañera is the ceremony that celebrates the coming of age of a girl in Latin American countries, and as a girl growing up seeing my mother’s pictures it was the only thing you could dream of. Some parents spend their whole lives saving the ceremony, instead of saving for a college fund. That is how important this ceremony is. You save up for: the locale, the dress, the shoes, the food, the gifts, the courts tuxes and dresses, the jewelry, the makeup, hair, and nails.
In Cask of Amontillado, Edgar Allan Poe presents a murderous tale of revenge revealed as the confession of a man who murdered another man over fifty years ago because of an insult. During a carnival festival, the murderer led his companion to the catacombs where he buried the man alive. The charter of Montresor lures his victim, Fortunato with the promise of a fine sherry, amontillado. As Poe’s character of Montresor guides the wine connoisseur, Fortunato, Poe symbolically foreshadows the impending murder.
In The Cask of Amontillado, Edgar Allen Poe displays the theme of revenge. In the story, Montressor narrates the story and feels he has been wronged by Fortunado and vows for vengeance against him. Montressor attempts to justify his future crime to the reader. “A wrong is unredressed when retribution overtakes its redresser. It is equally unredressed when the avenger fails to make himself felt as such to him who has done the wrong.” (Poe 101) Fortunado is unaware of the wrong he caused Montressor by insulting him. Montressor feels that this is reason enough for his retribution. “The thousand injuries of Fortunado I had borne as I best could, but when he ventured upon insult I vowed for revenge.” (Poe 101) The thought of revenge is
Sometimes friends can get into an argument and some things can hurt them, but not to a point where they want to hurt each other physically. Vengeance can bring justice to someone, but as well bring pain to the other. Revenge is a horrible emotion which can lead someone to do horrible things. Two companions, Montresor and Fortunato, destinies are controlled by one thing only, vengeance and murder. In the story, the narrator seeks revenge on Fortunato because he mortally insulted him. Montresor succeeds in luring Fortunato to his death without raising any suspicion. A horrible revenge made significantly more awful by the way that the retribution is being taken when no genuine offense had been given. In the short tale, “The Cask of Amontillado” by Edgar A. Poe, the major conflict of revenge is between Montresor and Fortunato, but it is interesting because Montresor is the only one who is aware of the conflict. The author uses the conflict to build suspense and to change the mood of the reader.