The narrator’s feminine traits, stemming from his childhood, are displayed in his “docility,” “humanity,” and “tenderness of heart” (254) and become particularly apparent in the nurturing, almost maternal, way he cares for his pets: he is “never [. . .] so happy as when feeding and caressing” his animals (254).
This femininity has matured into a failed masculinity that the narrator both covertly recognizes and denies. Even as he describes his maternalistic relationship to domestic animals, he notes how his affinity for them affords one of the “principal sources of pleasure” of his “manhood” (254). He reinforces the universal, hence appropriately masculine, nature of this emotion toward domestic pets in his appeal to the reader who has “cherished an affection for a faithful and sagacious dog” (254). Such affection, according to the narrator, should be preferred over the “paltry friendship and gossamer fidelity of mere Man” (254; emphasis in original). The dependent nature of the relationship between owner and
Cited: Piacentino, Ed. “Poe’s ‘The Black Cat’ as Psychobiography: Some Reflections on the Narratological Dynamics.” Studies in Short Fiction 35.2 (1998): 153–67. Poe, Edgar Allan. “The Black Cat.” 1843. The Short Fiction of Edgar Allan Poe. Ed. Stuart Levine and Susan Levine. Indianapolis: Bobbs-Merrill, 1976. 254–59. Stark, Joseph. “Motive and Meaning: The Mystery of the Will in Poe’s ‘The Black Cat.’” Mississippi Quarterly: The Journal of Southern Cultures 57.2 (2004): 255–63. 99