Taken from SparkNotes
Poe uses his words economically in the “Tell-Tale Heart”—it is one of his shortest stories—to provide a study of paranoia and mental deterioration. Poe strips the story of excess detail as a way to heighten the murderer’s obsession with specific and unadorned entities: the old man’s eye, the heartbeat, and his own claim to sanity. Poe’s economic style and pointed language thus contribute to the narrative content, and perhaps this association of form and content truly exemplifies paranoia. Even Poe himself, like the beating heart, is complicit in the plot to catch the narrator in his evil game.
As a study in paranoia, this story illuminates the psychological contradictions that contribute to a murderous profile. For example, the narrator admits, in the first sentence, to being dreadfully nervous, yet he is unable to comprehend why he should be thought mad. He articulates his self-defense against madness in terms of heightened sensory capacity. Unlike the similarly nervous and hypersensitive Roderick Usher in “The Fall of the House of Usher,” who admits that he feels mentally unwell, the narrator of “The Tell-Tale Heart” views his hypersensitivity as proof of his sanity, not a symptom of madness. This special knowledge enables the narrator to tell this tale in a precise and complete manner, and he uses the stylistic tools of narration for the purposes of his own sanity plea. However, what makes this narrator mad—and most unlike Poe—is that he fails to comprehend the coupling of narrative form and content. He masters precise form, but he unwittingly lays out a tale of murder that betrays the madness he wants to deny.
Another contradiction central to the story involves the tension between the narrator’s capacities for love and hate. Poe explores here a psychological mystery—that people sometimes harm those whom they love or need in their lives. Poe examines this paradox half a century before Sigmund Freud made it a leading concept in his theories of the mind. Poe’s narrator loves the old man. He is not greedy for the old man’s wealth, nor vengeful because of any slight. The narrator thus eliminates motives that might normally inspire such a violent murder. As he proclaims his own sanity, the narrator fixates on the old man’s vulture-eye. He reduces the old man to the pale blue of his eye in obsessive fashion. He wants to separate the man from his “Evil Eye” so he can spare the man the burden of guilt that he attributes to the eye itself. The narrator fails to see that the eye is the “I” of the old man, an inherent part of his identity that cannot be isolated as the narrator perversely imagines.
The murder of the old man illustrates the extent to which the narrator separates the old man’s identity from his physical eye. The narrator sees the eye as completely separate from the man, and as a result, he is capable of murdering him while maintaining that he loves him. The narrator’s desire to eradicate the man’s eye motivates his murder, but the narrator does not acknowledge that this act will end the man’s life. By dismembering his victim, the narrator further deprives the old man of his humanity. The narrator confirms his conception of the old man’s eye as separate from the man by ending the man altogether and turning him into so many parts. That strategy turns against him when his mind imagines other parts of the old man’s body working against him.
The narrator’s newly heightened sensitivity to sound ultimately overcomes him, as he proves unwilling or unable to distinguish between real and imagined sounds. Because of his warped sense of reality, he obsesses over the low beats of the man’s heart yet shows little concern about the man’s shrieks, which are loud enough both to attract a neighbor’s attention and to draw the police to the scene of the crime. The police do not perform a traditional, judgmental role in this story. Ironically, they aren’t terrifying agents of authority or brutality. Poe’s interest is less in external forms of power than in the power that pathologies of the mind can hold over an individual. The narrator’s paranoia and guilt make it inevitable that he will give himself away. The police arrive on the scene to give him the opportunity to betray himself. The more the narrator proclaims his own cool manner, the more he cannot escape the beating of his own heart, which he mistakes for the beating of the old man’s heart. As he confesses to the crime in the final sentence, he addresses the policemen as “[v]illains,” indicating his inability to distinguish between their real identity and his own villainy.
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Monday, February 1, 2010
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Ah, good ol' cut and paste. What do you want us to do with this though, Mr Hung? What aspects do you think are comment- worthy? Is there anything you don't agree with here? Does it bring up things which warrant further discussion?
ReplyDeleteYes, very good questions, indeed, sir. I am working on them. I would perhaps give you and the rest of the class a next profound discussion on this amazing short story by the master of horor Edgar Allen Poe tommorow evening.
ReplyDeleteSpeaking of this story, I've got a feeling that the narrator is a woman. Don't know why. O_O
ReplyDeleteGood analysis, but I disagree with this part.
"The more the narrator proclaims his own cool manner, the more he cannot escape the beating of his own heart, which he mistakes for the beating of the old man’s heart."
The beating of heart was caused by, according to the author, the over-acuteness of her/his senses (hearing in particular). Remember that the first time he/she heard the beating of heart was when he killed the old man. Therefore, I think that when the police arrived, he/she was tortured by guilt, which reminded him/herself of the sound of heart beat ON THAT NIGHT. In other words, according to the author, all the beating of heart mentioned in the story solely belonged to the old man.
I know this is confusing.
There's nothing as "over-acuteness of senses" in this story. All are the author's pure insanity.
Erm, Khuong you're not in this class, so why are you involved in our discussions? Just an observation.
ReplyDeleteHMMMMM under suspician Khuong .......................
ReplyDeleteFINE. I was TERRIBLY bored. If I'm not allowed to, I won't comment anymore. Happy?
ReplyDeleteKhuong, you're more than welcome to join the fray.
ReplyDeletehahaha the fray is a band... which is horrible btw the aadit :) and besides ur just jealous tht khuong beats u in everything -.-
ReplyDeletejah, you got 99 whilst he got a 100 :)
ReplyDeleteA surprise to know that Poe dressed in someone's clothes before he died. A surprise, indeed.
ReplyDeleteThis comment has been removed by the author.
ReplyDeletethe fry is not a bad band in fact they are awsome
ReplyDelete*fray
ReplyDelete