The Fall Of The House Of Usher Essay

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Symbolisms of “The Fall of the House of Usher”
Edgar Allan Poe was without a doubt an exceptional man that most people could not understand; yet, he was a brilliant writer with a very bizarre and dark style of writing. Reflecting upon Edgar Allan Poe’s, “The Fall of the House of Usher” the narrator is presented to be the key character of the story. During the course of the story the narrator presents many things in the story that are unclear to the reader, keeping the reader in a state of mystery and speculating. For illustration, even the conclusion of the story tends to leave the reader predicting; did the house of Usher really “fall”, or was it merely another symbolism of his writing. Even today, many people debate the diverse importance …show more content…

The narrator explains that Roderick is having a difficult time in life; therefore, Roderick Usher sent him a letter asking him to visit. Upon arriving at the house, he referred to the house as the “melancholy House of Usher.” Dark visualizations about the house kept coming into his mind; regardless of his normal thinking and reasoning; the narrator declares, “There are things beyond our ability to rationalize.” The narrator believes that if he could look at things in a different way or perhaps even in a brighter light, he might be able to transform it; however, when he gazes into the lake he sees, with even greater horror than before, a reflected image of the house in all its obscurities. All through the course of the story, Edgar Allan Poe would relentlessly use themes such as insanity and madness to associate the house back to Roderick …show more content…

As detailed in the story, the Usher family has a nearly flawless direct line of decent. Roderick Usher has only one living relative his twin sister Madeline Usher. This would mean that the Usher family is in danger of disappearing because neither Roderick nor his sister has any children of their own. In view of that, there is a probability of incest between Roderick and Madeline. Roderick and Madeline are both suffering from rather bizarre illnesses which perhaps may be the consequence of intermarriage in the family. Roderick suffers from “a morbid acuteness of the senses”; while Madeline illness is described as “…a settled apathy, a gradual wasting away of the person and frequent although transient affections of a partly cataleptical character…” which causes her to lose consciousness. Her body would portray a deathlike state of being. Nonetheless, Roderick believes that in some way the mansion controls his actions, in addition to what will ultimately become of him. “…For many years, he had never ventured forth—in regard to an influence whose supposititious force was conveyed in terms too shadowy here to be

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