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Monday, March 18, 2019

The Tall-Tale Heart Essay -- Literary Analysis, Allen Poe, Figurative

It is one o time in the morning you are exhausted and all you wish to do is sleep. Finally, when you are able to relax, close your eyes and begin to nod off, you see a loud creak in the floor and you suddenly conjure up up to bad thoughts of what this secluded noise is. In The Tall-Tale Heart by Edgar Allen Poe, various techniques are used to detail an emeritus military personnels uneasiness to the slightest of sounds at night as the cashier retells his murder of the old man. Since anyone in such situation would act similarly to the old man, his panic and anxiety is no surprise to the audience however, with Poes use of figural language, selection of details and diction the old mans jitteriness is aptly portrayed and characterized. The use of figurative language serves to compare what the narrator sees and let ons to something more relatable for the reader. Poe uses several examples of similes and personifications, but hardly a few check to the well-being of the old m an. As the narrator waits for the right moment to sweep away the old man, he notices the sound of the beating heart of the old man. Poe writes at that place came to my ears a low, dull, quick sound, such as a watch makes when enveloped in cotton, to further explain in detail exactly what the narrator comprehend (line 50-1). The comparison between the beating heart and the muffled clock serves as an exaggeration of a racing heart during time of fear and oer excitement. The swiftly beating heart also contributes to the trepidation that continues to become great and greater in the old man, as demonstrated in Poes personification of fears had been ever since growing upon him (line 21-2). Another added factor to the old mans fear is that the old man had been visited by Death, who... .... The word enveloped, taken from the Old French word voloper meaning to wrap up, is defined as concealing something, it can be inferred that Death will take the life-time of the old man. But using enveloped as supposed to its synonym phone gives the action a scary feel to it. The use of diction is virtually important when defining the old man because without the right words to discover the situation, all meaning and purpose of the story is lost. This spine-chilling and sinister plot is only effective if Poe uses the appropriate and proper literary elements, which he has done. Poe is able to stupor the reader and future readers to possibly think twice about mysterious and unusual noises heard in the night. Hopefully in the future, if ever you hear an eccentric noise when you sleep, you will remember the fate of the old man, and be wiser than he was.

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