Tuesday, October 30, 2012

Poe

So, I think I'm a little unique with my experiences regarding the darkly fascinating Edgar Allan Poe. As far as I can tell, most people read Tell Tale Heart and some of his poetry. Though I have read The Raven (on my own, sophomore year of college), I know next to nothing about his poetry. He's more famous for his poetry, and I have to remind myself that he's written more poems than just The Raven because I somehow just forget that.

What I have had since 7th grade, is the Collector's Library compilation of all of his short stories, titled "Tales of Mystery and Imagination". My mom recommended starting with Tale Tell Heart and so I did, alone in my room, right before bed. And I loved it!

I made my way, very slowly, through all of the stories in the book. Most of the others went over my head, but I read them anyway. The only Poe I have read in school, though, is Tell Tale Heart and it had been a long while since I've looked at it from a literary perspective.

The Cask of Amontillado, however, I will have to re-read, so here goes.

First of all, I find Poe so gripping because of how he has a tendency to just start in with the story and you feel like you have to catch up. I feel like some authors do this poorly because they wait too long to give you the background info, but Poe does it well. In this case, I'm immediately wondering who Fortunato is why WHY he's so insulting.

I'm a little confused about the webbing he points out as "Nitre". Wikipedia says "Niter is a colorless to white mineral crystallizing in the orthorhombic crystal system. It usually is found as massive encrustations and effervescent growths on cavern walls and ceilings where solutions containing alkali potassium and nitrate seep into the openings. It occasionally occurs as prismatic acicular crystal groups, and individual crystals commonly show twinning." I'm not really sure what it's importance is though.

I find it a little funny that in trying to google the latin phrase that is his family's moto, all I had to type in was "nemo" before it came up as the second suggestion. It means, "No one attacks me with impunity" or "No one can harm me unpunished". 

If you are curious- the last phrase means, "Rest in peace". 

What I find so wonderful about Poe is the way he explores the depth of the darkness in humanity, and yet, there is room for hope. I love that the narrator does not seem to get the satisfaction he expects from his deed. He leaves in a hurry and ends the story with the "rest in peace" you don't expect someone to afford someone they hated enough to murder. 

I also just love dark stories, but that's just me.

1 comment:

  1. Hey Elizabeth! I also really enjoy Poe (my personal favorite is his poem The Bells- it's actually really beautiful, especially when you read it aloud!) I agree that starting "in medias res" adds so much to the suspense of his writing; he completely cuts out unecessary introductions and lets the action and tension build from the start.

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