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Black Cat By Poe The Term Paper

.." So what the reader now is seeing and feeling is well, you wild crazy person, you are being paid back for your sins; your karma has come back to haunt you, insane soul that you are. And then, of course, more police arrived and they tore the bricks away and now Poe enjoys sharing with the reader the gory details of the rotting body. "The corpse, already greatly decayed and clotted with gore, stood erect before the eyes of the spectators." On the head of his wife's body was the cat, which had a "red extended mouth and solitary eye of fire." Worse yet, Poe says the cat had "seduced me into murder, and whose informing voice had consigned me to the hangman." The cat got caught up in the wall, along with his dead wife.

George Colton,...

[that there is in humans] an impulse to perform actions simply for the reason that they ought not to be performed." That sounds a lot like the critic quoted earlier, William Henry Smith. Maybe, even though they wrote their critiques many years ago, they just might be right.
Works Cited

Colton, George. "Poe's Tales." The American Review, 2.3 (1845): 306-09. (Reprinted in Nineteenth-Century Literature Criticism Vol. 16).

Smith, William Henry. "Tales, by Edgar Allan Poe." Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine 52.385

1847): 582-87. (Reprinted in Nineteenth-Century Literature Criticism, Vol. 1).

Sources used in this document:
Works Cited

Colton, George. "Poe's Tales." The American Review, 2.3 (1845): 306-09. (Reprinted in Nineteenth-Century Literature Criticism Vol. 16).

Smith, William Henry. "Tales, by Edgar Allan Poe." Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine 52.385

1847): 582-87. (Reprinted in Nineteenth-Century Literature Criticism, Vol. 1).
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