But here are three I did manage to: 1) “In shower of dirt and shale.” I think is a metaphor because it is comparing two unlike things without using the like or as. And the words that make you think it’s a metaphor is “shower of dirt and shale”. 2) “She stood behind the lunch counter, mouth clamped like an angry snapping turtle, as the children crept fearfully past.” I think this one is a simile because it’s comparing to unlike thing using the words like or as. So I knew it was a simile because it uses the words “, mouth clamped like an angry snapping…
Directions: Using complete sentences, answer the following questions about the themes in "The Cask of Amontillado":…
Edgar Allan Poe is known for his horror stories in 19 th century. Readers at that time were impressed by his scary writings. Edgar uses figurative language to create a morbid atmosphere throughout the story. His most famous story “The Cask of Amontillado” makes readers feel a macabre atmosphere because of the ironies he uses.…
In the short story “The Interlopers” and “The Cask of Amontillado”, the rising action gives you a good mental picture of the mood. When the reader reads the line of text from “The Interlopers” that says, “All around them lay a thick-strewn wreckage of splintered branches and broken twigs.” you can picture in your mind the two men with broken branches and twigs lying around them. Also, in “The Cask of Amontillado”, one line from the rising action is “We passed by walls of piled bones, with casks and puncheons intermingling, into the inmost recess of the catacombs.” In this sentence, you get a good description of what the catacombs looked like.…
All through the semester, read a numerous amount of short stories, ranging from Tarzan of the apes by Edgar Rice Burroughs to Spunk by Zora Neale Hurston. Each story includes their own twists and turns. Out of all the stories, I choose to write about The Cask of Amontillado by Edgar Allen Poe.…
Hawkins, Willard E. “Fiction “Phases.”” The Editor: The Journal of Information for Literary Workers 37.5 (1913): 131. Print.…
“The Cask of Amontillado” is a spectacular horror story by author Edgar Allan Poe, cleverly plotted and well crafted. In a prodigious show of mischief, Poe brings forth Fortunato, an epicure of superior wines, an enjoyer of festivities, and a very inebriated man. The night of Carnival, this jaunty fellow has lost all abstemiousness to the powerful grasp of intoxication. Perhaps had he not been so indulgent in his choice of vintage, he would have avoided falling prey to an even sorrier fate, namely, that which Mr. Poe chooses for him: “He had on a tight-fitting parti-striped dress, and his head was surmounted by the conical cap and bells.”[1] Behold the attire he wears to the grave. In his bumbling ignorance, Fortunato is blind to his forthcoming quietus. Poe, a master puppeteer, leads his marionette further and further into…
Authors use many literary elements, such as figurative language, to write out the theme of their stories. In the two short stories, “Cask of Amontillado” by Edgar Allan Poe and “The Most Dangerous Game” by Richard Connell, the themes are described by literary elements. “The Cask of Amontillado” is about a man trying to get revenge by tricking another man telling him about having expensive wine. “The Most Dangerous Game” is an eccentric short story about a General who lives on an island and hunts humans. The theme of irony delineate the themes for both of the short stories.…
In “The Cask of Amontillado”, Poe uses these two main literary devices to express important parts of the story without making it obvious. The simple symbolism gives the reader a clue to what each part the character will play in the short story. The foreshadowing gives the reader a vague sense of what may happen in the story’s future events. These two elements combine in “The Cask of Amontillado” to create a story that has a fascinating and creepy atmosphere that persuades the reader to continue reading to find out if his or her predictions are…
* Poetic devices such as similes and metaphors are used within passage. Examples of these include: “So tedious is this day as the night before some festival” (Simile), “For thou wilt lie upon the wings of night, Whiter than new snow upon a raven’s back” (metaphor)…
in edgar allan poe's short story, “The Cask of Amontillado”, a man named fortunato is murdered in a most unpleasant way by his assumed friend, Montresor. these events are being recounted by montresor half of a century after the fact to an unknown person and for an unknown reason. he tells the whole story of how he led fortunato into his vaults and then sealed him inside one of the walls in a crypt. although it seems like montressor is confessing to his past crime, it may be true that he is boasting about a deed that he still wholeheartedly believes he committed rightly.…
Roughly 56,600,000 people die every year, making it no surprise that authors everywhere create stories based around the sport of killing. In the horrific and sadistic stories of Edgar Allen Poe’s “The Cask of Amontillado” and Richard Connell’s “The Most Dangerous Game,” the authors use literary elements to illistrate nefarious murderers . No matter the motives of these murders, demented people always commit them. In “The Cask of Amontillado,” the guile Montresor seeks vengeance on Fortunato, an imprudent man who has an addiction to alcohol by using Fortunato’s desire of Amontillado against him to lure him to his death. In Connell’s amazing short prose “The Most Dangerous Game,” Rainsford, a skillful hunter, falls off a yacht into the Amazon. There he meets the hunting fanatic General Zaroff, who eventually implies that the only creatures that give him a thrill to hunt are humans. Rainsford thought he was being treated well and that him and Zaroff were to hunt other humans together; however, he soon finds out that he is the one who will be hunted. Authors Poe and Connell use tone, metaphores and suspense to illuminate a foreboding atmosphere in their tales “The Cask of Amontillado” and “The Most Dangerous Game” ultimately creeping readers out…
Fate plays a huge roll in people’s lives. It occurs in our lives through our own self image, personality, and the way we act towards each other. No one lives a life without a purpose; where everything happens as a coincidence. In “The Cask of Amontillado”, it was Fortunato’s fate that led him to be locked up and killed by Montresor. Fortunato was every wine taster’s rival. He was the best in town. This made him an easy target for competitors. Also, his passion for wine, especially sherry wine, made him commit bad choices. All he thought about was being able to taste the wine. Fortunato being such a person, it was his fate to be preyed on by his rivals. Another example of fate is in “The Liberation of Rome”. It was Amy’s fate to end up being Mr. Radlisch’s student. She was destined to have him as a teacher. Having a teacher like Mr. Radlisch who teaches false information about her family leads her to learn more about her self-identity. It also provokes her anger and passion for her ancestors. It then leads her to quitting Mr. Radlisch’s history class to continue being a vandal. It was also Mr. Radlisch’s fate to have Amy as his student. If it wasn’t for her, Mr. Radlisch wouldn’t have realized that what he was teaching was completely wrong. He wouldn’t have thought more deeply about the students he teaches every day. This was all because of Amy. Everything that happened between Amy and Mr. Radlisch had a purpose. Fate always has a purpose. In conclusion, fate plays a huge roll in people’s lives, whether good or bad.…
Edgar Allan Poe focuses on revenge in “Cask of Amontillado” by using a perfect plan, many cases of irony, and specific setting, that sets the mood. In this short story, Montresor, is trying to get revenge on Fortunato, for some unthinkable action. In order for the murder to happen, Montresor needed a perfect plan. On page five, Montresor starts to lure Fortunato in by saying “As you are engaged, I am on my way to Luchesi.…
The entire poem of Eldorado is supposed to be a love story. The story talks about how a knight had lost the love of his life and goes after her. To search for Eldorado the knight goes on a journey in which he searches for her, day and night, with great persistence. While on the journey the knight gains knowledge through his travels and realizes that his love is gone and he loses her trail that he is following. After he realizes that she is gone he goes through a state of depression and commits suicide.…