Obsession In The Tell Tale Heart

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Obsession is a “state in which someone thinks about someone or something constantly or frequently especially in a way that is not normal” (Merriam Webster Dictionary). Obsession plays a key role in Edgar Allen Poe’s short story, The Tell-Tale Heart. Poe is known as one of the most sick and twisted writers of his time, in fact many argue he still holds rank in that category when compared to modern writers. The obsession leads the narrator to commit a crime that questions his morality completely. Poe uses different symbols throughout The Tell-Tale Heart, not only showing his fears, but his obsession with death itself. These symbols include the old man’s “evil eye”, time, the heart, and the defense that he is not insane. It is fair to assume the old man and the narrator are neighbors in a mental institution. The “evil eye” and time in The Tell-Tale Heart are the main obsessions throughout the story. The narrator explains the eye by stating, “He had the eye of a vulture --a pale blue eye, with a film over it. Whenever it fell upon me, my blood ran cold…”(Poe 2). The eye of the old man drove him so insane that it lead him to kill a man he claimed to have loved. The “evil eye” is not only referring to the old man’s eye, but “I,” as in the narrator himself. This directly relates to the obsession with time that is often referred to throughout the story. The narrator believes the only way to beat time is to destroy himself. May explains in his analysis “The Tell-Tale Heart,” that “…to save the self from time by destroying the self is a paradox that the narrator can only deal with by displacing his need to destroy himself (the I) to a need to destroy the eye of the old man”(12). The narrator, in the end, destroys himself by killing the old... ... middle of paper ... ...nd fancied himself an utter genius for it”(Warpool 2). The author helps people realize that the author has meticulously planned out this murder and is not at all deranged, but in some senses a genius. This brings up an important point; is Poe hinting the narrator is not insane, but this deed is in fact just like any other premeditated murder? Indeed that is a point to be considered, but in the beginning of the story the narrator states: “The disease had sharpened my senses --not destroyed --not dulled them. Above all was the sense of hearing acute. I heard all things in the heaven and in the earth. I heard many things in hell”(Poe 1). The narrator explains his sickness in the beginning of the story which helps conclude that he indeed is insane. Yes, it is apparent that he plans out the murder, but this helps prove that he is not as mad as he makes himself out to be.

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