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Violence In Edgar Allen Poe's The Black Cat

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In Edgar Allen Poe’s “The Black Cat” the theme that alcoholism can lead to violence is illustrated by the narrator attacking his favorite pet, killing him, and ultimately killing his own wife. Initially, the narrator’s drunkenness leads to him cutting out the eye of his cat, Pluto. One night when he was intoxicated, he “grasped the poor beast by the throat, and deliberately cut one of its eyes from the socket!” (5). His alcoholism led him to commit violent actions that not only physically harmed his favorite pet, but also made the cat terrified of him. Second, the narrator decides to kill his cat. The narrator states that he needs to kill Pluto “because [he] knew that it had loved [him]” (6). The narrator’s constant drunkenness leads him

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