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Guilt In The Tell-Tale Heart By Edgar Allen Poe

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Guilt In The Tell-Tale Heart By Edgar Allen Poe
In the excerpt from “The Tell-tale Heart,” Edgar Allen Poe creates the disturbed character of an unnamed narrator through indirect characterization. Using the components of madness, fear, and guilt, Poe unravels a story about a guilty conscience and reveals the burden of guilt that a human heart must face, especially in the case of murder. Poe uses these components to try and reveal to the reader the true sanity of this narrator/murderer, however, it is revealed in the end when faced with the reality of his crime. “I went down to open it with a light heart,- for what had I now to fear?”. When the police show up to this man’s house, where the murder took place and where the body is buried, the man welcomes them in with no worries; still unaware

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