"It was about dusk....". The word dusk means dark and usually dark makes people afraid. Little kids and even adults are afraid of the dark due to what people betray happens in the dark. In the short story, "The Cask of Amontillado" written by Edgar Allen Poe, when it was said,”It was about dusk….” in line 21, it makes the reader scared and frightened to read the next sentence of the book because of the unnerving dialogue Poe uses. The short story is about a man, Montresor, who wants to kill Fortunato because he insulted him in a way that really got to him and hurt him. In order to kill Fortunato without him growing suspicious, Montresor treats him like a friend while handing him many rounds of drinks. Edgar Allen Poe uses amazing dialogue and sensory details throughout the story to keep the readers interested but at the same time scared to continue reading. …show more content…
In most scary movies, the parts that are supposed to make the audience scared is usually when it is dark out so the watcher will never know what is happening and neither does the character. Also, Montresor killed Fortunato by chaining him up and then built a layer of bricks in front of him to hide the evidence of him there. Once he was done building it, “I might hearken to it with the more satisfaction. I ceased my labors and sat upon the bones,” on page 378. Montresor sat and waited for Fortunato’s screams and the noise of the chains shaking to stop, for Fortunato to finally give up. Montresor was so comfortable with him killing Fortunato and hearing him struggle to get free that he had enough courage to just sit there outside the bricks and
Montresor tells the story in detail of how he leads a man, Fortunato, to his death. Montresor repeatedly expresses the need to kill Fortunato because he has done something to insult him and he must pay for it with his life. Montresor tells readers early in the story that he is going to be lying to Fortunato’s face by acting one way, but thinking about killing him the whole time. He says "I continued, as was my wont, to smile in
Moreover, another trait of Montresor's that helps him to plan the perfect murder is his deceitfulness. In the rising action, Montresor tricks Fortunato down into the depths of his catacombs, where he plans to perform the horrible, horrific, homicide . Montresor tells
Edgar Allan Poe’s “The Cask of Amontillado” is a goosebump-evoking tale that follows one man’s twisted plot for revenge. Although carnival season is in full-swing above ground, Fortunato finds himself being lead to his death underground in the catacombs. His “past insults” will ensure that he will never again participate in such feasts and merriment; Montresor, his “frenemy”, will make sure of that. As if the story isn’t creepy enough, Poe uses dialogue and sensory details to produce a mood that is both suspenseful and dark.
It is indicated that in the past that Fortunato has hurt Montresor many times, “The thousand injuries of Fortunato I had borne as I best could, but when he ventured upon insult I vowed revenge.” However, there were never any insults or unkind acts actually mentioned in the story. It is exactly the opposite. Fortunato was friendly and helpful towards Montresor. From the very beginning of the story, one can obviously see that Montresor thinks that Fortunato has wronged him. “He had a weak point-this Fortunato-although in other regards he was a man to be respected and even feared.” This line shows that Montresor’s plan was well thought out. There is not any indication of what Fortunato thinks about Montresor. It can only be assumed that he trusts him do to the fact that he follows Montresor into the catacombs. It is up until the last moment, before the last brick is laid, that Fortunato believes this is all a joke. “Ha! Ha! Ha! – He! He! He! – a very good joke, indeed-an excellent jest.” Montresor is successful in his plan for vengeance. He succeeds in having Fortunato follow him into the catacombs and with great ease, had him up against the wall and shackled. Then tier-by-tier, Montresor constructed Fortunato’s tomb of bricks around him. When Montresor called out to him, he heard nothing and thus his plan was a success. “In pace requiescat!”
We soon see foreshadowing of Fortunato's impending doom when the issue of Montresor's shield of arms is brought into the conversation as "A huge human foot d'or, in a field azure; the foot crushes a serpent rampant whose fangs are imbedded in the heel.". Even more appropriate is Montresor's family motto, translated as, "No one wounds me with impunity". Such a visual depiction and mental conviction due to family honor and history creates all the more impetus in Montresor to carry out the punishment that Fortunato deserves for wronging him, and more likely the family honor. When Montresor finally captures Fortunato in the catacombs, the climax of his precisely calculated deed, he revels in the sound of Fortunato's chains rattling, and "that I might hearken to it with the more satisfaction, I ceased my labors and sat down upon the bones". However, his satisfaction soon turns to apprehension when suddenly "a succession of loud and shrill screams, bursting from the throat of the chained form, seemed to thrust me violently back". He hesitates at this moment, when his revenge is sweetest, when he should bask in the suffering of his "enemy", and finds himself contemplating the shrill screams of his captive! He does eventually compose
Montresor had planned the murder. He knew when Fortunato had insulted him, he was going to get revenge. Montresor decided to become friends with him, then take him down to the catacombs to 'try some Amontillado', but he actually took him down there to bury him alive. He even had all of the bricks, mortar, and all of the other supplies ready to use down there. It was planned from thd beginning, he did not just get mad that day and decide to kill him on the
Montresor is the brutally insensitive narrator and presents his story from a unique first person perspective. Poe was intricate in telling this story from his point of view. He could have chosen to paint a picture for the readers through the eyes of Fortunato or possibly an outside narrator’s perspective. Poe makes an interesting decision as to who was going to tell the story. Significantly, he does not explain the nature of Fortunato’s transgression through Montresor's point of view. To explain further, Montresor tells the story in the first person, the reader is able to be directly aware of his thoughts therefore
Edgar Allan Poe portrays conflict by creating tension between Montresor and Fortunato. In the story, tension is merely only seen through the eyes of Montressor because of the animosity that he has against Fortunato for the cursing of his family's name which was one of an old and honored one. Montresor states his revenge by saying “The thousand injuries of Fortunato I had borne as I best could, but when he ventured upon insult, I vowed my revenge.” Montresor is stating that he had been able to bear insults, but once his family's name was insulted, he was driven to seek revenge from this humility. Montresor's evil intentions to murder Fortunato come solely from Fortantos insulting demeanor. The conflict that is shared between Fortunato and Montresor is the main factor which creates the theme of revenge in this story.
In the story “The Cask of Amontillado” by Edgar Allan Poe a guy named Montresor is seeking revenge on Fortunato because he insulted him. In my opinion Montresor is taking this way to far when he says he wants to kill him just because he said something bad about him. When he says this I can easily see that the narrator is very violent and has a sick mind.
Poe uses the contentions to build suspense in the short story. Throughout the story, the author never gives a clear explanation of why Montresor has so much loathing towards Fortunato. The author states, “You are rich, respected, admired, beloved; you are happy as once I was. You are a man to be missed for me it is no matter.” (Poe, 241). In
In Edgar Allen Poe’s story, The Cask of the Amontillado, the mood set is “creepy”. First of all, the story takes place in the catacombs. “The drops of moisture trickle among the bones (Poe 64).” The bones referred to in this quote are the bones of ancestors that were laid to rest in the catacombs. To some people, graveyards and cemeteries are creepy. I would assume that underground catacombs would feel the same way. Another way that I think this story is creepy, is how some of the people are dressed up in costumes.”He wore motley (Poe 62).” Motley is a type of costume that could be worn at a carnival. If everyone was dressed up in costumes, then you might not know who is who. Lastly, at the carnival there were people who were drunk. “He accosted
In the act of chaining Fortunato and bricking up the room he was in Montresor had no second thoughts. Not once did he think, "Maybe I shouldn't being doing this," or "This isn't the right thing to do to this man." He just carried on without one feeling of empathy. He needed this man to die knowing he should not have done what he had. When Montresor had finished Fortunato screamed and screamed and Montresor was not phased or affected at all by the horrid screams.
As for Montresor, he acts calmly from beginning to end. First, he wants to take revenge on Fortunato and plots it carefully in order to avoid the punishment. He knows his “enemy” very well, from Fortunato’s interests to his weakness, so he can easily kill Fortunato. During the process of murder, he is really calm and controlled. Step by step, he lures Fortunato to his gloomy cellar and kills Fortunato. He works in a place filled with bones and feels no terror. He even stops his “labour” just to hear Fortunato’s cry with “more satisfaction”. Though “for a brief moment [he] hesitated, [he] trembled”, he does not tremble for guilt but for the worry that Fortunato may escape. After Montresor take the revenge successfully, he feels satisfied and pleasant. The differences on their psychological changes create a terrified atmosphere which makes readers suffocate.
As the story progresses, Montresor devises a careful plan to lure Fortunato to his death trap, but he is careful enough not to place himself at risk. He approaches him at a carnival, and plays on his victim’s weakness for wine by offering to show him a brand of wine akin to the light Spanish sherry, Amontillado (8). The narrator presents an interesting description of his encounter with Fortunato at the carnival; at first expressing dislike for his friend’s behavior by claiming that he approached him with too much warmth since he was drunk, but then he adds that he was extremely delighted to see Fortunato at that particular moment. This illustrates the depth of Montresor’s desire to exert revenge on his friend, since the sole reason of his pleasure at seeing Fortunato is that he knew his plans had taken off, and he anticipated the satisfaction of the act of brutal revenge.
It is easy to question the Montresor’s sanity early in the story as the character smiles at the thought of the Fortunato’s immolation. He has joyful bliss with ideas and thoughts of Fortunato’s demise. In his mind, he is truly mistreated by the Fortunato and the act of slow execution offers a satisfaction too fulfil his desire of vengeance. The character has no moral conflict, he feels he was correcting a wrongful event that occurred in his life. Though a wine cellar would be cool and dark catacomb like, I don’t think there is any appropriate time that is normal to be that comfortable surrounded in human remains. The Fortunato had no reason to suspect the ill will of things to come, in actuality he did nothing wrong. The eeriness of the catacomb setting in hindsight should have alarmed the Fortunato.