The Pit and the Pendulum Essay

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    melancholy content. “The Pit and the Pendulum” by Edgar Allen Poe, one of the most renowned gothic authors, is a prime example of gothic literature. In the tale, the narrator is arrested and imprisoned for an unknown crime by supporters of the Inquisition in Spain. Throughout the story, his captors attempt to brutally kill him. However, he narrowly escapes death and is rescued by French troops, who have secured the prison. This bone-chilling

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    Did you ever read or saw the story or movie of The Pit and the Pendulum by Edgar Allan Poe? In this essay you will learn the similarities and differences between the text and the move of the pit and the pendulum. One teaser of a similarity in both the text and the movie is at the end the guy gets saved. Here’s a difference teaser is in the movie he gets saved by random people and in the text he gets saved by the army. In my next paragraph I’m going to tell you some more similarities. There are

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    The Pit and the Pendulum and the Fall of the House of Usher. One can tell that these stories relate to Edgar Allan Peo’s past life. Both of these stories are written in the Gothic style of writing. They convey fear and are usually located in dark, remote, or haunted places. Edgar knew how to get into people’s mind and bring great fear to them. In the Pit and the Pendulum Poe uses fiction and history. The narrator is caught in the Spanish Inquisition. The character finds himself in a dark pit counting

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    inevitability. In the case of Poe’s “The Pit and the Pendulum” and Alfred Hitchcock’s film adaptation, however, the hostage manages to break free from the binds and cheat death, surviving what could have been a slow and painful decease. Through their differences in setting and effective characterization, it’s evident that the survival from torture was more predictable in the film. The setting is an essential component in any story or film. For “The Pit and the Pendulum”, the audience is taken to two separate

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    Hope and Knowledge Without committing any crimes, the narrator, who is sentenced to death escapes twice throughout the story. Edgar Allan Poe wrote his story during the French Revolution, using romanticism literature. In the story, “The Pit and the Pendulum”, Poe uses interest in the imagination and emotion to illustrate that hope and knowledge can help in life and death situation, because without hope, the narrator would have given up on escaping his death, and uses his knowledge to determine his

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    Fear drives people to perform actions that range from horrific to heroic. An equally great motivator, hope, also drives one’s actions, although it tends to push them in a more positive way. In “The Pit and the Pendulum,” by Edgar Allan Poe, Poe illustrates through the thoughts of his narrator how the fear of death can banish hope to a place from which it can return only with outside help. Throughout the story, the narrator’s fear of death increases, and his hope of surviving decreases. This can be

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    The Pit and the Pendulum - Literature Response In The Pit and the Pendulum, by Edgar Allen Poe, constant suspense seemed to occur. Also, a feeling of worry for the prisoner seemed to linger when reading the story. Poe built this suspense by keeping the prisoner in a dimly lit area in which is difficult for the captive to navigate around. The readers get an idea of how dark the captive sees when he describes it as the “blackness of darkness” on page 4 of the story. It is obvious that what the captive

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    The Pit and the Pendulum is a 1961 horror film directed by Roger Corman , starring Vincent Price as Don Medina, or Nicholas, as the main character. The film was based on Edgar Allan Poe 's short story of the same name . The movie Poe fans might think that the short story has some differences from the film, some reasons would be that the short story is said in first person point of view, while the film has a bunch of different characters. Despite its differences, this movie deserves to be tagged as

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    During the Spanish Inquisition, many people who were not loyal to the Church were sentenced to a trial and in many cases, killed or tortured. In The Pit and the Pendulum, the character was standing before the judge, deep in his thoughts. The sentence of death was a common form of punishment during this time, and he was afraid of receiving this cruel fate. As he looked at the faces of the judges deciding his fate, seven tall candles appeared in front of him, resembling the looks of angels who would

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    or lurid descriptions and create feeling within his readers which are often adjacent to distress or rage. In his short story “The Pit and the Pendulum”, he applies descriptive image words to demonstrate to the audience how the judge's’ garb appeared as they posed over the narrator as he awaited his fate. When the narrator discovers he is trapped in a dungeon with a pit, he begins to surmise he is doomed to spend eternity in the netherworld. Through both of these situations, the readers feel apprehension

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