There is a big debate on whether Edgar Allan Poe was insane or whether his works were pieces of art. In my opinion, Poe was an amazing author and the reason people don't understand his literature is because they don't make an effort to read it. Yes, his stories have a more advanced vocabulary. Yes, some of his stories are sadistic, gruesome tales. However, I find that this does not make him insane per say, but an even better author.
Because of his terrible experiences as a child, Poe was filled with a lot of sorrow and depression at a young age. He had to suffer the difficulties of having a single mother raise him. Then his mother died and that loss hit him really hard because he was young and didn't have many other people he could really depend on. Next he was separated from his siblings and taken in by people he didn't even know. His adoptive father went on to abusing him and he didn't have very many friends. From his childhood, Poe was an outcast, never properly fitting in anywhere because of his state of mind. In all reality, if anyone had to go through what he went through, they couldn't possibly turn out to be completely normal.
I do not think he was insane, I just think he was able to express his depressing, melancholic feelings through his writing. When one can look beyond what is just written on the paper, when one can infer what the author is trying to really get across, one learns many things. Poe hides many morals and lessons in a lot of his stories and poems. The stories that aren't directly illustrating these things are just showing the reader a little bit more about Poe and his personality and feelings.
The works that Poe opened up in the most are probably his last stories and poems written. Here there is a lot of emotional sadness because of the loss of Poe's wife. It is easy, in these works, to get really attached to the main character and to feel what he is feeling. These works demonstrate the feelings of the narrator but also of the author. One is directly linked to Poe's thought process and his reaction to many situations.
I feel Poe is ingenious when it comes to his writing. He uses imagery, literary devices, symbolism and hidden meanings in such a way that once the readers infer and read between the lines, the story becomes so much more than just a story. It becomes an experience that we can link to our own lives. I encourage anyone who has not read any of Poe's works to start because you are honestly missing out on a lot!
Saturday, 9 November 2013
The Raven
The last poem I will interpret is The Raven. This is another extremely popular poem written by Poe and is another one of my favourites. Here is the link to the story as well as a vocal version: The Raven The Raven- spoken
The Tell-Tale Heart
This last story, I will be analysing the use of literary elements present. To summarize, it is about a crazy guy who kills the old man he lives with because of the old man's eye. Judging by the description, the old man has cataracts but his eye scares the madman into killing him. Eventually the guilt on his concious for having committed murder drives him insane and he admits his crime to police. Here is the story: The Tell-Tale Hear,
The first example of literary element in this story is the hyperbole. "I heard all things in the heaven and in the earth. I heard many things in hell." This is an exaggeration because although this man may have an acute sense of hearing it is not possible that he can hear things in heaven and in hell.
Next literary device is the metaphor. "And then, when my head was well in the room, I undid the lantern cautiously- oh, so cautiously- cautiously (for the hinges creaked)- I undid it just so much that a single ray fell upon the vulture eye." In this quote, Poe is comparing the eye of the old man to a vulture eye without using the words like or as. "A watch's minute hand moves more quickly than did mine." This is an example of a metaphor as well because it is a comparison between the speed of a watch's minute hand and of the madman's hand. Similarly when Poe says, "Meantime the hellish tattoo of the heart increased." he is comparing the beating of the heart to a terrible drumming sound.
Another common literary element is the simile. These are easier to spot out because it is a comparison between two things, using the words like or as. "His room was as black as pitch with the thick darkness..." Here Poe describes the room being pitch black. "And now have I not told you what you mistake for madness is but over-acuteness of the senses?- now, I say, there came to my ears a low, dull, quick sound, such as a watch makes when enveloped in cotton. I knew that sound well too. It was the beating of the old man's heart. It increased my fury, as the beating of a drum stimulates the soldier into courage." Here Poe uses two similes. First off, he describes the beating of the man's heart to a watch enveloped in cotton. Next he compares his fury, due to the old man's heart, and the courage of a soldier, due to the beating of a drum.
An interesting use of irony in this story is when the madman says, "..(for the shutters were close fastened, through fear of robbers,)..." This is ironic because the old man is locking the windows to protect himself from what is outside the house but really, it's what's inside the house that he needs protecting from.
Finally, Poe's best use of literary device in this story is the personification. "All in vain; because Death, in approaching him, had stalked with his black shadow before him, and enveloped the victim." In this quote, death is given human qualities and is said to have stalked its victim, and enveloped him. Poe is clearly an expert at using literary devices, which enhances the quality of his poems and stories.
Ideas used from grade seven English class oral discussion
The first example of literary element in this story is the hyperbole. "I heard all things in the heaven and in the earth. I heard many things in hell." This is an exaggeration because although this man may have an acute sense of hearing it is not possible that he can hear things in heaven and in hell.
Next literary device is the metaphor. "And then, when my head was well in the room, I undid the lantern cautiously- oh, so cautiously- cautiously (for the hinges creaked)- I undid it just so much that a single ray fell upon the vulture eye." In this quote, Poe is comparing the eye of the old man to a vulture eye without using the words like or as. "A watch's minute hand moves more quickly than did mine." This is an example of a metaphor as well because it is a comparison between the speed of a watch's minute hand and of the madman's hand. Similarly when Poe says, "Meantime the hellish tattoo of the heart increased." he is comparing the beating of the heart to a terrible drumming sound.
Another common literary element is the simile. These are easier to spot out because it is a comparison between two things, using the words like or as. "His room was as black as pitch with the thick darkness..." Here Poe describes the room being pitch black. "And now have I not told you what you mistake for madness is but over-acuteness of the senses?- now, I say, there came to my ears a low, dull, quick sound, such as a watch makes when enveloped in cotton. I knew that sound well too. It was the beating of the old man's heart. It increased my fury, as the beating of a drum stimulates the soldier into courage." Here Poe uses two similes. First off, he describes the beating of the man's heart to a watch enveloped in cotton. Next he compares his fury, due to the old man's heart, and the courage of a soldier, due to the beating of a drum.
An interesting use of irony in this story is when the madman says, "..(for the shutters were close fastened, through fear of robbers,)..." This is ironic because the old man is locking the windows to protect himself from what is outside the house but really, it's what's inside the house that he needs protecting from.
Finally, Poe's best use of literary device in this story is the personification. "All in vain; because Death, in approaching him, had stalked with his black shadow before him, and enveloped the victim." In this quote, death is given human qualities and is said to have stalked its victim, and enveloped him. Poe is clearly an expert at using literary devices, which enhances the quality of his poems and stories.
Ideas used from grade seven English class oral discussion
Friday, 8 November 2013
A Dream Within a Dream
This is probably one of my favourite poems written by Edgar Allan Poe because of the amount of emotion he puts into it. To help others understand its meaning, I will be analysing it. Here is a link: A Dream Within a Dream
"Take this kiss upon the brow! And, in parting from you now, thus much let me avow- you are not wrong, who deem that my days have been a dream;" This poem was written after Poe's wife died, meaning one can assume it is dedicated to her. He parts from her, giving her one last kiss goodbye. Claiming next, that everyone could see that he was in love with her and she made him happy. He could not have asked for anything more than her, and it was like a dream come true.
"Yet if hope has flown away in a night, or in a day, in a vision, or in none, is it therefore the less gone? All that we see or seem is but a dream within a dream." This next part of the poem illustrates the hopelessness in the situation. Hope is not something there permanently and can disappear in a night, a day, a vision, at any moment of our lives. He is questioning how he can depend on something as unreliable as hope itself. The famous concluding line of this stanza is, "all that we see or seem is but a dream within a dream", meaning that our life, everything that happens to us day by day, is about as predictable and logical as a dream.
"I stand amid the roar of a surf-tormented shore, and I hold within my hand grains of golden sand- how few! yet how they creep through my fingers into the deep, while I weep- while I weep!" When Poe talks about the surf tormented shore here, he could be comparing it to his feelings. The roaring, raging, crazy waves could be compared to the emotional instability he is going through with the pain, the sorrow, the anger and the confusion due to his loss. Next he talks about grains of sand that he holds in his hands, which are slipping through his fingers. In my opinion, this stands for the time slipping away from him. Although he wants to live life and keep moving forward he is so overwhelmed with sorrow that he is unable to function. He tries slowing down time so he can cope with his loss, but nobody has that kind of power and like the grains of sand, time is just keeps creeping through his fingers, one grain at a time.
"O God! can I not grasp them with a tighter clasp? O God! can I not save one from the pitiless wave? Is all that we see or seem but a dream within a dream?" In the last part of this paragraph, Poe is begging God for his help. He implores him to slow down time, so he can overcome his emotions and keep living life to its fullest. He then questions again whether everything that happens to us in life is as irrelevant as a dream. This is an extremely popular poem by Poe because it addresses a topic that many people still question today. What is the point of our existence?
Ideas used from grade ten English class oral discussion
"Take this kiss upon the brow! And, in parting from you now, thus much let me avow- you are not wrong, who deem that my days have been a dream;" This poem was written after Poe's wife died, meaning one can assume it is dedicated to her. He parts from her, giving her one last kiss goodbye. Claiming next, that everyone could see that he was in love with her and she made him happy. He could not have asked for anything more than her, and it was like a dream come true.
"Yet if hope has flown away in a night, or in a day, in a vision, or in none, is it therefore the less gone? All that we see or seem is but a dream within a dream." This next part of the poem illustrates the hopelessness in the situation. Hope is not something there permanently and can disappear in a night, a day, a vision, at any moment of our lives. He is questioning how he can depend on something as unreliable as hope itself. The famous concluding line of this stanza is, "all that we see or seem is but a dream within a dream", meaning that our life, everything that happens to us day by day, is about as predictable and logical as a dream.
"I stand amid the roar of a surf-tormented shore, and I hold within my hand grains of golden sand- how few! yet how they creep through my fingers into the deep, while I weep- while I weep!" When Poe talks about the surf tormented shore here, he could be comparing it to his feelings. The roaring, raging, crazy waves could be compared to the emotional instability he is going through with the pain, the sorrow, the anger and the confusion due to his loss. Next he talks about grains of sand that he holds in his hands, which are slipping through his fingers. In my opinion, this stands for the time slipping away from him. Although he wants to live life and keep moving forward he is so overwhelmed with sorrow that he is unable to function. He tries slowing down time so he can cope with his loss, but nobody has that kind of power and like the grains of sand, time is just keeps creeping through his fingers, one grain at a time.
"O God! can I not grasp them with a tighter clasp? O God! can I not save one from the pitiless wave? Is all that we see or seem but a dream within a dream?" In the last part of this paragraph, Poe is begging God for his help. He implores him to slow down time, so he can overcome his emotions and keep living life to its fullest. He then questions again whether everything that happens to us in life is as irrelevant as a dream. This is an extremely popular poem by Poe because it addresses a topic that many people still question today. What is the point of our existence?
Ideas used from grade ten English class oral discussion
The Pit and the Pendulum
Out of all Poe's stories this one is probably my favourite. Not only is it easier to understand, but it is extremely descriptive; allowing the reader to step into the shoes of the main character and experience what he is going through. I will be summarizing this short story then giving a few examples of the author's use of literary imagery. Here is a copy: The Pit and the Pendulum
In times long ago, when the Roman Catholic Church was in power, there weren't kings, queens, presidents or prime ministers making and enforcing rules. Instead, those in charge were the inquisition. They were not very compassionate, sympathetic people and tortured their victims in the most gruesome ways. The Pit and the Pendulum describes the experience of a prisoner of the Inquisition.
He is first tortured with the loss of his sight, when plunged into darkness, and almost falls into an abyss of death. Next, he is tied up as a bladed pendulum descends toward him, slowly guaranteeing his death. As he escapes this, the steel walls of his cell are heated to a scorching temperature and start closing in on him, thus forcing him toward the chasm. Right before he falls to his death, the Inquisition is defeated and a member of the French army saves his life.
Throughout this whole incident, the reader is subjected to the victims roller coaster of emotions. One second he is hopeful, another scared, another hopeless and another completely blank. This is done so effectively by Poe because he is able to utilize literary imagery so perfectly. From childhood, one is taught the basic five senses; visual (see), auditory (hear), olfactory (smell), gustatory (taste), and tactile (touch).
There are many examples of these senses throughout The Pit and the Pendulum. For example,at the beginning of the story, the author begins with a description of what he sees. "I saw the lips of the black-robed judges. They appeared to me white- whiter than the sheet upon which I trace these words- and thin even to grotesqueness; thin with the intensity of their expression of firmness- of immovable resolution- of stern contempt of human torture. I saw that the decrees of what to me was Fate were still issuing from those lips. I saw them writhe with deadly locution. I saw them fashion the syllables of my name; and I shuddered because no sound succeeded." In this paragraph, the description of the Inquisition members is so clearly stated that one can't help but to imagine them; their thin, disgusting lips, mouthing not the narrators name, but our very own. He creates a horrific scene where one can imagine themselves, waiting for those terrible, black-robed figures to sentence us to death.
Poe uses the tactile sense to describe what the victim is feeling in his cell. "At first, I proceeded with extreme caution, for the floor, although seemingly of solid material, was treacherous with slime." At the mention of slime, one may automatically think of rocks on the edge of a river bank, barely covered with running water; which produces a slimy, slippery surface. One may imagine that the floor he is walking on is slimy and slippery from the blood of previous victims who've been tortured in the same cell. This description of the tactile sense lets the reader use their imagination to figure out why the cell is slimy.
Another sense used in this story is olfactory. "At the same time, my forehead seemed bathed in a clammy vapour, and the peculiar smell of decayed fungus arose to my nostrils." This is probably the most effective use of literary imagery in this story because although Poe does not say what this odour is caused by, the audience can infer. At the bottom of the abyss there could be a pile of rotting corpses, a monster, a sewer pit filled with rats, a pile of garbage, the severed body parts of previous captives. The possibilities are endless, however there is enough description to allow one to use their imagination.
The auditory sense is used shortly after when the narrator drops a severed brick from the floor into the abyss. "For many seconds I hearkened its reverberations as it dashed against the sides of the chasm in its descent; at length, there was a sullen plunge into water, succeeded by loud echoes." This gives a little more insight on what may be lurking at the bottom of this mysterious pit but doesn't altogether give anything away. Sure there may be water, however what is in the water? How far down is the fall? How big around, in diameter, is the hole? Many unanswered question are left up to the reader to answer.
The only sense not used a lot in this story is the gustatory sense. The main character simply states that "A burning thirst consumed [him]...". This allows those reading this story to feel the unquenchable thirst of the narrator. In all of Edgar Allan Poe's stories and poems there is a significant amount of literary imagery. This story in particular is one of my favourites not only because of that, but because of its hopeful ending unlike many of Poe's other works.
Ideas used from grade seven English class oral discussion
In times long ago, when the Roman Catholic Church was in power, there weren't kings, queens, presidents or prime ministers making and enforcing rules. Instead, those in charge were the inquisition. They were not very compassionate, sympathetic people and tortured their victims in the most gruesome ways. The Pit and the Pendulum describes the experience of a prisoner of the Inquisition.
He is first tortured with the loss of his sight, when plunged into darkness, and almost falls into an abyss of death. Next, he is tied up as a bladed pendulum descends toward him, slowly guaranteeing his death. As he escapes this, the steel walls of his cell are heated to a scorching temperature and start closing in on him, thus forcing him toward the chasm. Right before he falls to his death, the Inquisition is defeated and a member of the French army saves his life.
Throughout this whole incident, the reader is subjected to the victims roller coaster of emotions. One second he is hopeful, another scared, another hopeless and another completely blank. This is done so effectively by Poe because he is able to utilize literary imagery so perfectly. From childhood, one is taught the basic five senses; visual (see), auditory (hear), olfactory (smell), gustatory (taste), and tactile (touch).
There are many examples of these senses throughout The Pit and the Pendulum. For example,at the beginning of the story, the author begins with a description of what he sees. "I saw the lips of the black-robed judges. They appeared to me white- whiter than the sheet upon which I trace these words- and thin even to grotesqueness; thin with the intensity of their expression of firmness- of immovable resolution- of stern contempt of human torture. I saw that the decrees of what to me was Fate were still issuing from those lips. I saw them writhe with deadly locution. I saw them fashion the syllables of my name; and I shuddered because no sound succeeded." In this paragraph, the description of the Inquisition members is so clearly stated that one can't help but to imagine them; their thin, disgusting lips, mouthing not the narrators name, but our very own. He creates a horrific scene where one can imagine themselves, waiting for those terrible, black-robed figures to sentence us to death.
Poe uses the tactile sense to describe what the victim is feeling in his cell. "At first, I proceeded with extreme caution, for the floor, although seemingly of solid material, was treacherous with slime." At the mention of slime, one may automatically think of rocks on the edge of a river bank, barely covered with running water; which produces a slimy, slippery surface. One may imagine that the floor he is walking on is slimy and slippery from the blood of previous victims who've been tortured in the same cell. This description of the tactile sense lets the reader use their imagination to figure out why the cell is slimy.
Another sense used in this story is olfactory. "At the same time, my forehead seemed bathed in a clammy vapour, and the peculiar smell of decayed fungus arose to my nostrils." This is probably the most effective use of literary imagery in this story because although Poe does not say what this odour is caused by, the audience can infer. At the bottom of the abyss there could be a pile of rotting corpses, a monster, a sewer pit filled with rats, a pile of garbage, the severed body parts of previous captives. The possibilities are endless, however there is enough description to allow one to use their imagination.
The auditory sense is used shortly after when the narrator drops a severed brick from the floor into the abyss. "For many seconds I hearkened its reverberations as it dashed against the sides of the chasm in its descent; at length, there was a sullen plunge into water, succeeded by loud echoes." This gives a little more insight on what may be lurking at the bottom of this mysterious pit but doesn't altogether give anything away. Sure there may be water, however what is in the water? How far down is the fall? How big around, in diameter, is the hole? Many unanswered question are left up to the reader to answer.
The only sense not used a lot in this story is the gustatory sense. The main character simply states that "A burning thirst consumed [him]...". This allows those reading this story to feel the unquenchable thirst of the narrator. In all of Edgar Allan Poe's stories and poems there is a significant amount of literary imagery. This story in particular is one of my favourites not only because of that, but because of its hopeful ending unlike many of Poe's other works.
Ideas used from grade seven English class oral discussion
Sunday, 27 October 2013
The Haunted Palace
For my blog this week, I will be analysing another poem written by Poe that was already seen in his short story The Fall of the House of Usher. Here is a copy of the poem: The Haunted Palace
"In the greenest of our valleys by good angels tenanted, once a fair and stately palace-radiant palace-reared its head. In the monarch Thought's dominion-it stood there! Never seraph spread a pinion over fabric half so fair!" Here Poe could be describing the mind of Roderick Usher. It was once a "green", "fair", "stately", happy place filled with "radiant", positive thoughts. God and "good angels" took care of his mind and kept him sane. Usher was confident in his goodness and stood proud.
"Banners yellow, glorious, golden on its roof did float and flow, (this-all this- was in the olden time long ago,) And every gentle air that dallied, in that sweet day, along the ramparts plumed and pallid, a winged odor went away." The banners decorating the roof of the mansion could be considered Roderick Ushers hair when he was younger. It was blonde and beautiful and flowed from his head. Poe describes how his fair hair, that fanned out like feathers, was so light and warm that it kept "winged odors" away.
"Wanderers in that happy valley, through two luminous windows saw spirits moving musically, to a lute's well-tuned law, round about a throne where, sitting (Porphyrogene!) in state his glory well befitting, the ruler of the realm was seen." In this verse, Poe explains how others saw Usher through his eyes (being the windows). Anyone who talked with Usher saw with their own eyes how hopeful and happy the spirits were that moved about in his head. He had positive, nice thoughts that practically sang of their goodness to others.
"And all the pearl and ruby glowing was the fair palace-door, through which came flowing, flowing, flowing, and sparkling evermore, a troop of Echoes, whose sweet duty was but to sing, in voices of surpassing beauty, the wit and wisdom of their king." Here, Poe is representing the mouth of Roderick Usher. With his pearly white teeth and his ruby red lips, it was the door to his thoughts. Feelings and "Echoes" came "flowing" through and it was their job to express the mind of the their king, this being Usher.
"But evil things, in robes of sorrow, assailed the monarch's high estate.) Ah, let us mourn!-for never morrow shall dawn upon him desolate!) And round about his home, the glory that blushed and bloomed is but a dim-remembered story of the old time entombed." Here one can see the illness taking over the mind of Roderick. It is an "evil thing" attacking the kings mind (monarch's high estate). Everyone around Usher is affected by this illness because he will never be himself again. He will never be anything more than depressed and "desolate". The past is now only a memory, a "story", a happiness that will never return.
"And travellers now, within that valley, through red-litten windows see vast forms, that move fantastically to a discordant melody, while, like a ghastly rapid river, through the pale door, a hideous throng rush out forever and laugh-but smile no more." Finally, Poe explains how others view Usher now. They see, through his bloodshot eyes the terrors that are overtaking his mind. They can see the madness, the "vast forms", the demons haunting him day and night. Through the pale door being his old, ugly mouth, there is no longer the wonderful thoughts of the king but an evil laugh. The king, overcome with his illness, smiles no longer, sings no more, but just laughs like a madman. In this poem, one can see the comparison of a person in his natural state of mind and then the progression into the madness of a disease of the mind.
Ideas used from grade seven English class oral discussion
"In the greenest of our valleys by good angels tenanted, once a fair and stately palace-radiant palace-reared its head. In the monarch Thought's dominion-it stood there! Never seraph spread a pinion over fabric half so fair!" Here Poe could be describing the mind of Roderick Usher. It was once a "green", "fair", "stately", happy place filled with "radiant", positive thoughts. God and "good angels" took care of his mind and kept him sane. Usher was confident in his goodness and stood proud.
"Banners yellow, glorious, golden on its roof did float and flow, (this-all this- was in the olden time long ago,) And every gentle air that dallied, in that sweet day, along the ramparts plumed and pallid, a winged odor went away." The banners decorating the roof of the mansion could be considered Roderick Ushers hair when he was younger. It was blonde and beautiful and flowed from his head. Poe describes how his fair hair, that fanned out like feathers, was so light and warm that it kept "winged odors" away.
"Wanderers in that happy valley, through two luminous windows saw spirits moving musically, to a lute's well-tuned law, round about a throne where, sitting (Porphyrogene!) in state his glory well befitting, the ruler of the realm was seen." In this verse, Poe explains how others saw Usher through his eyes (being the windows). Anyone who talked with Usher saw with their own eyes how hopeful and happy the spirits were that moved about in his head. He had positive, nice thoughts that practically sang of their goodness to others.
"And all the pearl and ruby glowing was the fair palace-door, through which came flowing, flowing, flowing, and sparkling evermore, a troop of Echoes, whose sweet duty was but to sing, in voices of surpassing beauty, the wit and wisdom of their king." Here, Poe is representing the mouth of Roderick Usher. With his pearly white teeth and his ruby red lips, it was the door to his thoughts. Feelings and "Echoes" came "flowing" through and it was their job to express the mind of the their king, this being Usher.
"But evil things, in robes of sorrow, assailed the monarch's high estate.) Ah, let us mourn!-for never morrow shall dawn upon him desolate!) And round about his home, the glory that blushed and bloomed is but a dim-remembered story of the old time entombed." Here one can see the illness taking over the mind of Roderick. It is an "evil thing" attacking the kings mind (monarch's high estate). Everyone around Usher is affected by this illness because he will never be himself again. He will never be anything more than depressed and "desolate". The past is now only a memory, a "story", a happiness that will never return.
"And travellers now, within that valley, through red-litten windows see vast forms, that move fantastically to a discordant melody, while, like a ghastly rapid river, through the pale door, a hideous throng rush out forever and laugh-but smile no more." Finally, Poe explains how others view Usher now. They see, through his bloodshot eyes the terrors that are overtaking his mind. They can see the madness, the "vast forms", the demons haunting him day and night. Through the pale door being his old, ugly mouth, there is no longer the wonderful thoughts of the king but an evil laugh. The king, overcome with his illness, smiles no longer, sings no more, but just laughs like a madman. In this poem, one can see the comparison of a person in his natural state of mind and then the progression into the madness of a disease of the mind.
Ideas used from grade seven English class oral discussion
Monday, 21 October 2013
The Fall of the House of Usher
This week for the Edgar Allan Poe blog, I will be summarizing one of his famous stories and giving details about his amazing use of symbolism. This story is called "The Fall Of The House of Usher" and here is a link to view it The Fall of the House of Usher.
Basically this story starts off with an old acquaintance of Roderick Usher being asked over to spend time with him to catch up. Usher is suffering from a disease which heightens his senses, meaning he is only able to wear certain clothes, listen to certain instruments (stringed) and he cannot stand strong smells or the faintest of light. Once the friend arrives at the House of Usher, he is immediately put off by something odd, and takes particular notice in a fissure running from the top of the house all the way to its base. Regardless, he continues forward to see his old friend. Usher explains to his friend about a different disease that is affecting his twin sister and mentions that she his last living relative.
The Usher family is a pure family thus meaning they are incest. While the friend is staying with Roderick, Lady Madeline (Roderick's sister) gets even more sick and is no longer allowed to leave her bed. Usher and his guest continue on to play music, to read and to paint together. These are Roderick's only pass times seeing as he hasn't left his house in years.
Eventually Lady Madeline dies and her brother delays the burial one night because of the unknown circumstances of her death. She is buried, in a screwed coffin, in a vault under the guest bedroom which is sealed by an iron door. It used to be a dungeon and a gun powder room due to its limited accessibility. As soon as Lady Madeline is buried, Roderick's condition worsens and he turns into a madman always staring into nothingness.
One night, on the midst of a storm, Roderick's friend starts hearing noises. He blames it on the storm at first but can't get back to sleep because of an uneasy feeling. Roderick then comes into his room and throws open the window yelling at the storm. To calm him down, his friend shuts the window and starts reading a book to him. Whenever a sound is described in the book it is as if that sound is produced mysteriously in real life. Finally, the guest can no longer pretend he isn't hearing things and jumps up in fright. Roderick starts ranting like a crazy person about how he's been hearing her faint struggles for days now, but he didn't dare open his mouth. He proceeds to admit that they buried Lady Madeline alive and that she has finally escaped. As he says this Lady Madeline, bloody and ghastly looking, stumbles through the door and scares Roderick Usher to death. She then dies from her struggles. As his friend flees in fright he sees the fissure in the Usher house start to part and the house collapses and sinks into the tarn lake, and is forgotten about forever.
For me, the biggest example of symbolism in this story would be the
fissure in the wall. "Perhaps the eye of a scrutinizing observer might have discovered a barely perceptible fissure, which, extending from the roof of the building in front, made its way down the wall in a zigzag direction, until it became lost in the sullen waters of the tarn." This mention of the crack in the wall of the House of Usher could have been foreshadowing that some sort of event would cause the crack to split in half. In my opinion, the the two sides of the crack represented the two twin siblings, Roderick and his sister. Each was linked to the other on deep levels even including insanity, considering the fact that Roderick "heard" his sister long before she escaped her coffin. They were the last living descendants of the Usher family and they were depended on to keep the family going however, this did not happen. The Usher family fell apart at their generation just as the house split apart when they both died. They were holding each other together and one could not go without the other. That fissure in the wall is symbolism of not only a house falling apart but a whole family line falling apart. Poe demonstrates this use of symbolism in this story as well as many others like The Black Cat, The Tell-Tale Heart and The Raven.
Ideas used from grade seven English class oral discussion
Basically this story starts off with an old acquaintance of Roderick Usher being asked over to spend time with him to catch up. Usher is suffering from a disease which heightens his senses, meaning he is only able to wear certain clothes, listen to certain instruments (stringed) and he cannot stand strong smells or the faintest of light. Once the friend arrives at the House of Usher, he is immediately put off by something odd, and takes particular notice in a fissure running from the top of the house all the way to its base. Regardless, he continues forward to see his old friend. Usher explains to his friend about a different disease that is affecting his twin sister and mentions that she his last living relative.
The Usher family is a pure family thus meaning they are incest. While the friend is staying with Roderick, Lady Madeline (Roderick's sister) gets even more sick and is no longer allowed to leave her bed. Usher and his guest continue on to play music, to read and to paint together. These are Roderick's only pass times seeing as he hasn't left his house in years.
Eventually Lady Madeline dies and her brother delays the burial one night because of the unknown circumstances of her death. She is buried, in a screwed coffin, in a vault under the guest bedroom which is sealed by an iron door. It used to be a dungeon and a gun powder room due to its limited accessibility. As soon as Lady Madeline is buried, Roderick's condition worsens and he turns into a madman always staring into nothingness.
One night, on the midst of a storm, Roderick's friend starts hearing noises. He blames it on the storm at first but can't get back to sleep because of an uneasy feeling. Roderick then comes into his room and throws open the window yelling at the storm. To calm him down, his friend shuts the window and starts reading a book to him. Whenever a sound is described in the book it is as if that sound is produced mysteriously in real life. Finally, the guest can no longer pretend he isn't hearing things and jumps up in fright. Roderick starts ranting like a crazy person about how he's been hearing her faint struggles for days now, but he didn't dare open his mouth. He proceeds to admit that they buried Lady Madeline alive and that she has finally escaped. As he says this Lady Madeline, bloody and ghastly looking, stumbles through the door and scares Roderick Usher to death. She then dies from her struggles. As his friend flees in fright he sees the fissure in the Usher house start to part and the house collapses and sinks into the tarn lake, and is forgotten about forever.
For me, the biggest example of symbolism in this story would be the
fissure in the wall. "Perhaps the eye of a scrutinizing observer might have discovered a barely perceptible fissure, which, extending from the roof of the building in front, made its way down the wall in a zigzag direction, until it became lost in the sullen waters of the tarn." This mention of the crack in the wall of the House of Usher could have been foreshadowing that some sort of event would cause the crack to split in half. In my opinion, the the two sides of the crack represented the two twin siblings, Roderick and his sister. Each was linked to the other on deep levels even including insanity, considering the fact that Roderick "heard" his sister long before she escaped her coffin. They were the last living descendants of the Usher family and they were depended on to keep the family going however, this did not happen. The Usher family fell apart at their generation just as the house split apart when they both died. They were holding each other together and one could not go without the other. That fissure in the wall is symbolism of not only a house falling apart but a whole family line falling apart. Poe demonstrates this use of symbolism in this story as well as many others like The Black Cat, The Tell-Tale Heart and The Raven.
Ideas used from grade seven English class oral discussion
Saturday, 12 October 2013
Alone
This week I will start interpreting Edgar Alan Poe's works. The first one I would like to begin with is a poem written in his childhood called Alone. This poem has a lot of hidden messages so I will talk about its meaning. Keep in mind that this is my interpretation meaning anyone could have a completely different opinion about the symbolism of this poem. Here is a link: Alone by Edgar Allan Poe
Firstly, I feel as if this poem was directly related to Poe's childhood. Although some of his Gothic stories about murders may not be about him, this one could easily be linked to his life as a youth. "From childhood's hour I have not been as others were-I have not seen as others saw-I could not bring my passions from a common spring..." These first few lines of Poe's poem demonstrate his feelings toward his peers. He claims to be different than everyone else the very first line. He proceeds by explaining how he doesn't see things the same way as others see them and he can't seem to find common passions with the other kids. This makes him feel excluded and alienated due to his differences. He seems to be more of an awkward child that doesn't fit in with anyone.
"...From the same source I have not taken my sorrow; I could not awaken my heart to joy at the same tone; and all I lov'd, I lov'd alone..." This part of the poem continues by demonstrating that Poe could not feel the same things as those surrounding him. When they are sad, he does not understand why. When they feel happy, he can't seem to feel the same joy. He is very different and the things that he likes aren't things that the other children like so he feels very alone.
"Then-in my childhood-in the dawn of a most stormy life-was drawn from ev'ry depth of good and ill the mystery which binds me still:..." This represents the trigger in his life. It is describing an event which changed his life forever, which ends up being the beginning of a dark, "stormy life". It still affects him and "binds" him, not allowing an escape from this constant darkness and sorrow. This trigger, in my opinion, would be when his mother died. Although he was too young at the time to understand, he could look back at it when he wrote this poem realizing how much better off he would've been with his real mother. He comes to realization that his father had ditched their family so Poe feels a strong sense of abandonment.
"...From the torrent, or the fountain, from the red cliff of the mountain, from the sun that round me roll'd in its autumn tint of gold..." Here, Edgar describes the happy things in life. In my opinion, the image he creates here is absolutely beautiful. He is describing the natural beauties in life. At the same time when he describes "the sun that round me roll'd" it could represent his life just passing by in a blur. He is no longer keeping track of the days because he can't bring himself to care any longer. His childhood is rolling by.
"...From the lightning in the sky as it pass'd me flying by- from the thunder and the storm and the cloud that took the form..." This part of "Alone" contradicts the wonderful things he described in the previous verse. He is portrays the darkness of a storm. It could be an example of all the chaos going on at the moment, with the lightning and the thunder and the overwhelmingly, numerous feelings and thoughts that are running through his head. These two parts together show that although he sees the nice things in life that make others happy, they do not affect him because they are hidden by a dark rain cloud representing his thoughts that are constantly in a chaotic cluster. His feelings are comparable to the dark, dismal mood of a storm.
"...(When the rest of Heaven was blue) of a demon in my view." In this final verse, Poe describes the dark storm cloud in the shape of a demon. He says that "the rest of Heaven was blue" meaning the rest of the world was happy, beautiful and amazing like he described earlier. On the other hand, this "demon" was blocking his sight and how he saw the world. Although he knows there are good things surrounding him there is an obstacle preventing him from being happy. This obstacle could be, like I mentioned before, his mixed up feelings about the loneliness he feels and the loss and abandonment due to the death of his mother. Another twist on the demon image could be his foster father. I did not go into great detail about his childhood life in the biography, but it was thought that Edgar's foster dad abused him physically and mentally. (What influenced Edgar Allan Poe's works?) This means that he could have used the demon as an image representing the conflict and abuse he dealt with at home because of his foster dad. In conclusion, this poem could very possibly represent Edgar Allan Poe's childhood because of the similar comparisons between his tragedies, his feelings and his conflicts.
Ideas used from grade ten English class oral discussion
Firstly, I feel as if this poem was directly related to Poe's childhood. Although some of his Gothic stories about murders may not be about him, this one could easily be linked to his life as a youth. "From childhood's hour I have not been as others were-I have not seen as others saw-I could not bring my passions from a common spring..." These first few lines of Poe's poem demonstrate his feelings toward his peers. He claims to be different than everyone else the very first line. He proceeds by explaining how he doesn't see things the same way as others see them and he can't seem to find common passions with the other kids. This makes him feel excluded and alienated due to his differences. He seems to be more of an awkward child that doesn't fit in with anyone.
"...From the same source I have not taken my sorrow; I could not awaken my heart to joy at the same tone; and all I lov'd, I lov'd alone..." This part of the poem continues by demonstrating that Poe could not feel the same things as those surrounding him. When they are sad, he does not understand why. When they feel happy, he can't seem to feel the same joy. He is very different and the things that he likes aren't things that the other children like so he feels very alone.
"Then-in my childhood-in the dawn of a most stormy life-was drawn from ev'ry depth of good and ill the mystery which binds me still:..." This represents the trigger in his life. It is describing an event which changed his life forever, which ends up being the beginning of a dark, "stormy life". It still affects him and "binds" him, not allowing an escape from this constant darkness and sorrow. This trigger, in my opinion, would be when his mother died. Although he was too young at the time to understand, he could look back at it when he wrote this poem realizing how much better off he would've been with his real mother. He comes to realization that his father had ditched their family so Poe feels a strong sense of abandonment.
"...From the torrent, or the fountain, from the red cliff of the mountain, from the sun that round me roll'd in its autumn tint of gold..." Here, Edgar describes the happy things in life. In my opinion, the image he creates here is absolutely beautiful. He is describing the natural beauties in life. At the same time when he describes "the sun that round me roll'd" it could represent his life just passing by in a blur. He is no longer keeping track of the days because he can't bring himself to care any longer. His childhood is rolling by.
"...From the lightning in the sky as it pass'd me flying by- from the thunder and the storm and the cloud that took the form..." This part of "Alone" contradicts the wonderful things he described in the previous verse. He is portrays the darkness of a storm. It could be an example of all the chaos going on at the moment, with the lightning and the thunder and the overwhelmingly, numerous feelings and thoughts that are running through his head. These two parts together show that although he sees the nice things in life that make others happy, they do not affect him because they are hidden by a dark rain cloud representing his thoughts that are constantly in a chaotic cluster. His feelings are comparable to the dark, dismal mood of a storm.
"...(When the rest of Heaven was blue) of a demon in my view." In this final verse, Poe describes the dark storm cloud in the shape of a demon. He says that "the rest of Heaven was blue" meaning the rest of the world was happy, beautiful and amazing like he described earlier. On the other hand, this "demon" was blocking his sight and how he saw the world. Although he knows there are good things surrounding him there is an obstacle preventing him from being happy. This obstacle could be, like I mentioned before, his mixed up feelings about the loneliness he feels and the loss and abandonment due to the death of his mother. Another twist on the demon image could be his foster father. I did not go into great detail about his childhood life in the biography, but it was thought that Edgar's foster dad abused him physically and mentally. (What influenced Edgar Allan Poe's works?) This means that he could have used the demon as an image representing the conflict and abuse he dealt with at home because of his foster dad. In conclusion, this poem could very possibly represent Edgar Allan Poe's childhood because of the similar comparisons between his tragedies, his feelings and his conflicts.
Ideas used from grade ten English class oral discussion
Tuesday, 8 October 2013
Literary devices
Edgar Allan Poe was a literary genius due to his effective use of literary elements in his many Gothic short stories and poems. Firstly, what is a literary element? A literary element or device is a characteristic used by an author to enhance his writing. There are many examples of these, however I will only address the main ones I will be using while interpreting Poe's works.
First off, there is the alliteration. This is when the author repeats the same letters, sounds or words in the same sentence. For example, in The Bells, "To the swinging and the ringing of the bells, bells, bells, of the bells, bells, bells, bells, bells, bells, bells", where the word bells is repeated allowing the reader to almost hear the bells themselves. Next up is the simile. This is used when the author is trying to compare two things and in order to do so he uses the word like or as in between them. An example of a simile would be in The Fall of the House of Usher when the narrator says the house had, "...vacant eye-like window..." Here Poe compares the windows of the house to vacant eyes with the use of the word like.
A similar literary element often confused with the simile is the metaphor. This also consists of a comparison however it must be a comparison without the words like or as. In The Black Cat, Poe writes, "The fury of a demon instantly possessed me." This would be an example of a metaphor comparing the man's anger to that of a demons. A personification is when the author gives a human attribute to an inanimate object. This would be like in The Tell-Tale Heart, "...for it was not the old man who vexed me, but his Evil Eye." Here Poe is calling the eye evil but an eye cannot be evil. The personification is used very often in Poe's works because this is one of his favourite ways to bring the story and the things in his story to life.
Another literary device used by Poe is foreshadowing. He will sometimes put emphasis on a certain part of a story so one can infer what might happen in the end. For example, in The Masque of the Red Death, there is a lot of emphasis put on the red chamber and how nobody wants to go into it. This could foreshadow that they will eventually be forced into it. He also uses irony very effectively in his works to lighten up the mood a bit or to teach a lesson or moral. For example, in The Cask of Amontillado, the main character leads his friend Fortunato to find some Amontillado in a vault underground. Fortunato, unlike his name, is unfortunate and is murdered by his friend. The main literary element that makes Edgar Allan Poe such a successful Gothic literature author is his use of imagery. Imagery is the description of the five senses in any given situation. Poe effectively describes these senses in all his works allowing the reader to smell, taste, hear, touch, and see what the characters do, therefore attaching the readers to their characters.
Other literary devices less frequently used in Poe's stories and poems are the hyperbole, the onomatopoeia and the flashback. The hyperbole is an exaggeration for example in The Narrative of A. Gordan Pym, it is said "I felt, I am sure, more than ten thousand times the agonies of death itself." This is an exaggeration of the pain the narrator felt. Onomatopoeia is a sound that imitates the word like in The Pit and the Pendulum: "It was appended to a weighty rod of brass, and the whole hissed as it swung through the air." Here one can hear the hissing sound of the pendulum as it swings to and fro. Finally the flashback is when a character is thinking back on a past event, and describes what happens to give the reader further intelligence as to why certain things happen the way they do in the present day. For example, in The Raven: "Ah, distinctly I remember it was in the bleak December..." the author is thinking back on when the event occurred. Due to the use of these many literary elements in Edgar Allan Poe's stories and poems, he can effectively make the reader feel any way he wants them to feel.
First off, there is the alliteration. This is when the author repeats the same letters, sounds or words in the same sentence. For example, in The Bells, "To the swinging and the ringing of the bells, bells, bells, of the bells, bells, bells, bells, bells, bells, bells", where the word bells is repeated allowing the reader to almost hear the bells themselves. Next up is the simile. This is used when the author is trying to compare two things and in order to do so he uses the word like or as in between them. An example of a simile would be in The Fall of the House of Usher when the narrator says the house had, "...vacant eye-like window..." Here Poe compares the windows of the house to vacant eyes with the use of the word like.
A similar literary element often confused with the simile is the metaphor. This also consists of a comparison however it must be a comparison without the words like or as. In The Black Cat, Poe writes, "The fury of a demon instantly possessed me." This would be an example of a metaphor comparing the man's anger to that of a demons. A personification is when the author gives a human attribute to an inanimate object. This would be like in The Tell-Tale Heart, "...for it was not the old man who vexed me, but his Evil Eye." Here Poe is calling the eye evil but an eye cannot be evil. The personification is used very often in Poe's works because this is one of his favourite ways to bring the story and the things in his story to life.
Another literary device used by Poe is foreshadowing. He will sometimes put emphasis on a certain part of a story so one can infer what might happen in the end. For example, in The Masque of the Red Death, there is a lot of emphasis put on the red chamber and how nobody wants to go into it. This could foreshadow that they will eventually be forced into it. He also uses irony very effectively in his works to lighten up the mood a bit or to teach a lesson or moral. For example, in The Cask of Amontillado, the main character leads his friend Fortunato to find some Amontillado in a vault underground. Fortunato, unlike his name, is unfortunate and is murdered by his friend. The main literary element that makes Edgar Allan Poe such a successful Gothic literature author is his use of imagery. Imagery is the description of the five senses in any given situation. Poe effectively describes these senses in all his works allowing the reader to smell, taste, hear, touch, and see what the characters do, therefore attaching the readers to their characters.
Other literary devices less frequently used in Poe's stories and poems are the hyperbole, the onomatopoeia and the flashback. The hyperbole is an exaggeration for example in The Narrative of A. Gordan Pym, it is said "I felt, I am sure, more than ten thousand times the agonies of death itself." This is an exaggeration of the pain the narrator felt. Onomatopoeia is a sound that imitates the word like in The Pit and the Pendulum: "It was appended to a weighty rod of brass, and the whole hissed as it swung through the air." Here one can hear the hissing sound of the pendulum as it swings to and fro. Finally the flashback is when a character is thinking back on a past event, and describes what happens to give the reader further intelligence as to why certain things happen the way they do in the present day. For example, in The Raven: "Ah, distinctly I remember it was in the bleak December..." the author is thinking back on when the event occurred. Due to the use of these many literary elements in Edgar Allan Poe's stories and poems, he can effectively make the reader feel any way he wants them to feel.
Sunday, 29 September 2013
Edgar Allan Poe's Biography
Edgar Allan Poe was a literary god in his time as well as now. He wrote many gothic short stories and poems which caught the attention of numerous readers. Poe was born January 19th in Boston in 1809. He had one sister Rosalie and a brother, Henry. Their parents had separated and the children were living with their mother until she died in 1811. Henry was fortunate enough to go off to live with his grandparents while Rosalie and Edgar went up for adoption.
Poe's adoptive family had a good deal of money and therefore sent him to good schools where he got a quality education. Edgar even went across seas to learn Latin and French when he was six, which he excelled in when he went to university in 1826. No more than a year later he started drinking and ended up in debt forcing him to quit the University of Virginia. His foster dad disowned him and without any education, money or job history Poe had no choice but to move to Boston to join the army. There he excelled and became sergeant major.
A couple years later his foster mother died so his foster dad, having no one left, reached out to him offering to pay to send him to West Point. Once there however, Poe's foster dad cut him off and eventually, due to misbehaviour, Poe was dismissed. Without any financial help, friends, and job, Poe moved to New York to publish some of his stories. He had no luck for the longest time until he won a contest with his story "The Manuscript Found in a Bottle".
He became an editor of a newspaper and eventually brought his extended family (his actual aunt and cousin) to live in New York with him. Edgar, 27 years old, married his 13 year old cousin Virginia. For years Poe moved from paper to paper trying to get more of his stories to sell. He even tried starting his own paper but that failed. In 1847, Virginia died and Poe was deeply distraught. He regained his physical health later that year however his mental health was still questionable. He was an alcoholic, moving from New York to Philidalphea to Richmond trying to find a steady job with high income. He went to leave Richmond to go back to New York however took the wrong train and was found in Baltimore where he was taken to the hospital due to his constant lapses in and out of consciousness. He died in the hospital October 7th, 1849 from unknown causes. The mystery of Poe's death is another aspect which draws readers to his many gruesome short stories and poems. (poestories.com)
Poe's adoptive family had a good deal of money and therefore sent him to good schools where he got a quality education. Edgar even went across seas to learn Latin and French when he was six, which he excelled in when he went to university in 1826. No more than a year later he started drinking and ended up in debt forcing him to quit the University of Virginia. His foster dad disowned him and without any education, money or job history Poe had no choice but to move to Boston to join the army. There he excelled and became sergeant major.
A couple years later his foster mother died so his foster dad, having no one left, reached out to him offering to pay to send him to West Point. Once there however, Poe's foster dad cut him off and eventually, due to misbehaviour, Poe was dismissed. Without any financial help, friends, and job, Poe moved to New York to publish some of his stories. He had no luck for the longest time until he won a contest with his story "The Manuscript Found in a Bottle".
He became an editor of a newspaper and eventually brought his extended family (his actual aunt and cousin) to live in New York with him. Edgar, 27 years old, married his 13 year old cousin Virginia. For years Poe moved from paper to paper trying to get more of his stories to sell. He even tried starting his own paper but that failed. In 1847, Virginia died and Poe was deeply distraught. He regained his physical health later that year however his mental health was still questionable. He was an alcoholic, moving from New York to Philidalphea to Richmond trying to find a steady job with high income. He went to leave Richmond to go back to New York however took the wrong train and was found in Baltimore where he was taken to the hospital due to his constant lapses in and out of consciousness. He died in the hospital October 7th, 1849 from unknown causes. The mystery of Poe's death is another aspect which draws readers to his many gruesome short stories and poems. (poestories.com)
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