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The Fall Of The House Of Usher Essay

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“The fall of the House of Usher” is a short story written by Edgar Allan Poe in 1839. The story is centered on the house of Usher and its mysterious residents Roderick and Madeline Usher. The narrator receives a letter from Roderick stating that he is ill and in desperate need of Roderick’s help. Fear and evil are both very apparent themes throughout this story. The narrator encounters the feeling of fear and evil upon first arriving to the house and in his description of the house. He begins to describe the house of having an evil, desolate look that creates despair in him. Through his description, he implies that the house is filled with fear and evil. The house evokes fear inside the narrator, just in its mere physical appearance alone. “I again uplifted my eyes to the house itself... the vivid force of the sensations which oppressed me” (Poe). The house is described of having bleak walls and an oppressive atmosphere that is unavoidable. Perhaps, the house is the cause of Roderick's illness. The narrator states that Roderick is also terrified of the house. Roderick says that the house is what is making …show more content…

When Roderick writes to the narrator he states that he has “acute bodily illness of a mental disorder which oppressed him”(Poe). He also states “I shall perish” and “I dread the events of the future”. Roderick knows that he will perish but is unaware of when or what will kill him, It might be his illness or the house itself. He also fears the death of his beloved twin sister and soul companion, Madeline Usher. He tells the narrator that Madeline's illness baffles her physicians and that she is catatonic. In modern day terms, means she has epilepsy. Roderick is aware that is Lady Madeline dies he will be alone in his dreadful enormous mansion and this terrifies him. Both he and Madeline are the last two living descendants of the Usher family, so their death is the end of the House of

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