The Role Of Structural Choices In Edgar Allen Poe's The Tell-Tale Heart

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Edgar Allen Poe’s structural choices in “The Tell-Tale Heart” affect our understanding of the narrator and his actions. An example of this is the way he presents the main character. The main character appears to be unstable, and he killed an old man because of one of his eyes, which the main character refers to as “the vulture eye”. In the story, the character is talking about the murder of the old man after it happened; he is not narrating the story at the exact moment that it happened. You can tell that he is talking about it after it happened because the narrator says “you”, meaning that he is talking to someone, and is telling them the story. For example, in the story he said, “You should have seen how wisely I proceeded—with what caution—with …show more content…

Another structural choice that Poe made was in the story’s sentence structure. The narrator’s speech contains many dashes. For example, in the story the narrator said, “When I had waited a long time, very patiently, without hearing him lie down, I resolved to open a little—a very, very little crevice in the lantern.” (61-62). The dashes give the impression that the narrator is interrupting himself, and is adding detail to what he is saying. These dashes appear throughout the story, and they affect the story by also giving more details as to what happened and what the narrator did. They affect the reader’s understanding of the narrator because they show that the narrator likes to give details, and interrupts himself to do so. Poe could have chosen not to add those dashes, and not provide those extra details for the reader, but he did. The structural choices made by Edgar Allen Poe in “The Tell-Tale Heart” affect the understanding of the narrator and his actions to the

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