preview

What Is The Meaning Of The Black Cat By Edgar Allan Poe

Decent Essays
Open Document

Edgar Allan Poe’s short story “The Black Cat,” incorporated images and hidden meanings that resulted in making him do disturbing things that will keep you reading until the end. In the story, the bad things he did in life led him to have a constant guilty feeling. Poe writes this short story as if you would be in his shoes with him with deep images. In the end, Poe shows us that his guilt builds up until he can not hold it in anymore. Poe’s type of writing show how guilt messed with his mind. The man in the story is an alcoholic and so when he was drunk, he did things that he did not feel so good about. That led him to have a huge amount of guilt and the only way to relieve this build up of emotions was to get rid of what reminded him of the bad things that he had done. He says “my disease grew upon me-for what disease is like Alcohol...even Pluto began to experience the ill-effects of my temper”(5). He starts to recognize what drinking does to him and how he said he abused or killed all of his animals “except for Pluto.” …show more content…

When he writes, although it is strange, they are descriptions that have simple words yet prove what he is trying to say effectively. When he was describing what he did, it made sense to how he thought. His in depth descriptions gave his readers an insight into what goes on in his mind and the crazy thoughts he has. In the beginning paragraph, the narrator says, “ In their consequences, these events have terrified--have tortured--have destroyed me. Yet I will not attempt to expound them”(1). This quote is saying that he is being affected by the actions that he will later do in the story. There is another part in the story when he is saying “half of horror, half of remorse” so there is some feeling going on in his

Get Access