Wednesday, November 30, 2016

The Cask of Amontillado


Review
       
          “I would make him pay, yes; but I would act only with the greatest care.”

Source: https://americanenglish.state.gov
          Edgar Allan Poe's The Cask of Amontillado must have been the real story behind Selena Gomez's Kill ‘Em with Kindness. That story has given me so much to remember – the splendid lesson of sweet revenge, the presence of unusual events, and the wonderful way of writing which brought me beyond the limits of my imagination.


          The story was based on the perception of the narrator which is the murderer himself. It started with stating his insights about Fortunato, whom he believed had hurt him a thousand times and made him suffer quietly, and his plan of making a sweet revenge. The text is in a sequence structure base on the order of happenings on that day of murder.

          Deception at its finest – that describes the whole story of The Cask of Amontillado. The darkness of the fictional prose was presented with the use of so many ironies. The literal meaning of the dialogues, the actions, and even the name used in the story seem to contrast heavily with Poe's actual message.

          Montresor shows a still kindness in which Fortunato interprets that it is all because he is fond of him. Well, the truth is everything is just a trick. Poe has given the victim the name of Fortunato that means fortunate however what happened to him in the story was a complete contrast.  Moreover, the text doesn't only feature a verbal irony but also presents a dramatic one. The whole setting of the story is ironic.

          As I read through the text, some of the strategies I used were making predictions, visualizing and understanding the sequence of events, asking questions, and drawing conclusions on the mysteries of the story. I kept on drawing conclusions on what would be Montresor's plan of revenge and kept on asking that could it really be possible to make Fortunato suffer out of his kindness.

Source: https://americanenglish.state.gov
          My imagination in the story was even more alive on the part where they went to the resting place of the dead of the Montresor family. I visualized everything and felt every emotion of the words presented in the text.

          “I took down from their places on the wall two brightly burning lights. I gave one of these to Fortunato and led him to a wide doorway.  There we could see the stone steps going down into the darkness. Asking him to be careful as he followed, I went down before him, down under the ground, deep under the old walls of my palace. We came finally to the bottom of the steps and stood there a moment together. The earth which formed the floor was cold and hard. We were entering the last resting place of the dead of the Montresor family. Here too we kept our finest wines, here in the cool, dark, still air under the ground.”

          Well, I’ve went through the depth of text and shook my head upside down, and I end up wondering on and on about the horrific murder – was being insulted enough to commit murder? Or there are just some other reasons why Montresor did it? 

          The story was indeed excellently strange. Like what the others have said, it is as if a starless night sky, placid and dark. It has something I have never seen in other typical stories. The Cask of Amontillado marks another treasure in literature, an extraordinary work out of Edgar Allan Poe's ingenuity.

No comments:

Post a Comment