Actually, Montresor acts as if he respects Fortunato. Montresor knows he is taking advantage of Fortunato and this is another sign of hypocrisy. When the narrator arrives at the House of Usher in order to visit a friend. While the relationship between him and Roderick is never really explained, the reader does learn that they were childhood friends. That Usher writes to the Narrator, telling him to give him company in his time of need. But Poe's story is a record of both distancing and identification. In other words, the Narrator seems to remove himself from Usher, terrified of his illness, house, his appearance, but as the narrative goes on he cannot help but be drug into Usher's strange world. The “Cask of Amontillado” by Edgar Allan Poe portrays the hypocrisy of a spiteful man through the character Montresor in his attempt to take his “friend” Fortunato’s …show more content…
In a dark comedic manner, she questions a person’s ability to live a proper Christian existence without bigotry and hatred. In "Everything That Rises Must Converge," his mother is definitely racist. She is scared of the colored people who got onto the bus, and of colored people in general. The black woman on the bus is wearing the same ugly green hat as Julian’s mother pairs the two women. It is not surprising that with Flannery O’Connor’s southern roots and religious upbringing, she is able to convey short stories in which the characters come to learn a moral lesson. O’Connor depicts the sinful duplicitous lives in which we live, whose displaced souls are in need of redemption because no one appears to live a devout Christian life worthy of God’s grace and salvation. O’Conner accentuates her character’s flawed human nature, and transforms their transgressions through what appears to be a moral revelation. "A Good Man Is Hard to Find" shows some of the themes which were to characterize the typical O'Connor story. The story shows the construction of a normal family by three escaped convicts. As the family leaves The Tower, the children are attracted again to the monkey which attracted their attention when they first arrived. Members of the ape family have long been used in Christian art to symbolize sin, cunning, and lust, and have also been used to symbolize the soul of man in its blindness, sinfulness, and