The Tell-Tale Heart
The Tell-Tale Heart
Summary
The story,
The Tell-Tale Heart was written by an American short story writer, poet and
critic, Edgar Allan Poe. In this story, an unnamed narrator tries to convince
his audiences of his sanity while revealing many folds of a mystery of a
murder. In the beginning of the story the narrator tries to justify his sanity
with a claim that he can hear all the sounds from Heaven, Earth and Hell. As
further evidence to his sanity, he tells why and how he killed an old man.
The narrator used
to live in a house with old man. He loved the old man because he hadn’t done
anything wrong to the narrator. He didn’t have any desire to possess the wealth
of the old man either. But the old man had a pale blue eye with a film over it.
The eye, that looked like the eyes of the vulture irritated the narrator. So, he made up his mind to take the life of
old man in order to get rid of his eye.
The narrator went
into the chamber of the old man with a lantern at about mid night. As he turned
on the lantern with its light focused on the eyes of old man, he found them
closed because the old man was fast asleep. He repeatedly went into his chamber
for 7 nights. During the whole week he found the old man’s eyes closed which made
it difficult for the narrator to kill him. On the eighth night the narrator
entered the old man’s room with even more patience and precaution. This time,
his thumb slipped on the lantern making a sound which caused the old man to
wake up. The old man sat on his bed and the narrator kept on standing in front
of him quietly. Soon, the narrator started hearing low, dull and quicksand
getting louder and quicker. He suspected that the sound might be heard by his
neighbors. Losing no time, he jumped upon the old man, dragged him off the bed
and covered him with bed clothes. The old man’s heart beating stopped as he was
stoned now then he dismembered the dead body into pieces and buried the pieces
under the wooden floor. It was 4 o'clock in the morning when he accomplished
his mission without leaving a single trace of murder behind.
At about 4 in the
morning, 3 people entered the old man’s house introducing themselves as police
officers. They had been informed of the shriek(crime) made at night and had
come there to investigate on it. The narrator told them that the old man was
not in the country and the sound had been made by himself in his dream. He also
asked them to search the house. The police officer investigated thoroughly but
didn’t find anything wrong. In his enthusiasm the narrator asked them to sit on
chairs and he himself sit on the chair just above the old man’s body pieces.
Then they started chatting on familiar things. But very soon the narrator began
to hear the same low, dull and quick sound getting louder and quicker. When the
police officers laughed, the narrator thought that they knew everything and
were making fun of him. Since he couldn’t stand the sound and mockery(tease) of
police officers, he confessed his crime.
Questions
1.
Write the summary of the story in one paragraph.
The story follows an unnamed narrator who insists on
his sanity after murdering an old man with a “vulture eye”. The murder is
carefully calculated, and the murderer hides the body by dismembering it and
hiding it under the floor boards. Ultimately, the narrator’s guilt manifests
itself in the hallucination that the man’s heart is still beating under the
floorboards.
2. Justify the
title “The Tell – Tale Hear”.
A tale tell heart is one which reveals or indicates
something covert or concealed. The narrator seems to have very sensitive ears
because when he entered the old man’s room to kill him his ears hear a low,
dull, quick sound, such as a watch makes when enveloped in cotton. The sound
was possibly of the watch the old man was wearing or alternatively, the sound
of the watch beetle that is known to surround a dying body. But for the
narrator it was the old man’s heart. He was excited to uncontrolled terror and finally,
dragging the old man to the floor, kills him. He even places his hand over the
heart, which didn’t pulsate. Anyway, after he kills the old man that night, he
dismembers body parts, and places them under the floor boards. Meanwhile, the
policemen, they have arrived at the old man’s house upon receiving information.
Sit on the chairs placed for them and talk with each other. The sound of the
beating heart starts growing on him again. This must have happened as he must
have forgotten to remove the watch off the old man’s hand or the watch beetle
may have continued buzzing but with each passing moment, the narrator’s mental
equilibrium takes a nasty turn. In his mental fit, he believes the sound
reaching his ears was the beating of the dead old man’s heart. Now unable to
control the continuous sound, he confesses of the murder. It was the supposed
beating of the dead heart that led to the revelation of the crime. Thus, the
title of story is justified.
3. Write the
character sketch of narrator.
The narrator is a complex character is not mad but he suffers
from mental derangement. He speaks like a man who has lost touch with today
world. He kills the old man for not any valid reason rather he has a disease-
Homicide. A mad person cannot think and argue like the narrator. In brief, we
may say there is something abnormal in his mind, on the one hand. And on the
other hand, he peacefully and cleverly unlatches the door keeping his head
inside. A mad man cannot know the game of word as the narrator plays with police
officers.
By the deep psychological study, he seems to be a man of high intellect.
He claims that he has killed the old man not for worldly affair but to get rid
of his vulture eye. Generally, a mad man does not think such noble thought. On
the other hand, he kills him for very private reason. So, we cannot say he is
mad rather he has an obsession of killing.
The
narrator is mad: - The story is driven out by the narrator’s insistence upon
his innocence but by insistence on his sanity. This, however, is self-
destructive because in attempting to prove his sanity he fully admits he is
guilty of murder. His denial of insanity is based on his systemic actions and
precision a rational explanation for irrational behavior. This rationality
however, is undetermined by his lack of motivation. Despite this, he says the
idea of murder, “haunted me day and night”. The story’s final scene, however,
is a result of the narrator’s feeling of guilt. His nerves dictate his true
nature. Despite his best efforts at defending himself, the narrator’s “over
acuteness of the senses”, which help him hear the heart beating in floor
boards, is actually evidence that he is truly mad.
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