Considering that he is the only source that we have, we must suppose he is being unreliable. To justify his actions through his words. Montresor was dedicated to his own point of view, which is cruel, vicious, shrewd, and bitter. Montresor doesn’t mind telling us about his torture and murder of Fortunato he thinks what he did was the right way to handle the situation.…
It was a regular stormy afternoon in Portland Oregon. Until the police sirens went off. They captured the 28 year old murders. Their identities were Jeffery,Earl, and Kingston Lininhower. However,the next month would be Jeffery Lininhower’s worst nightmare.…
To start with, Montresor had two rules on how to get the perfect revenge. Montresor says that, "I must not only punish, but punish with impunity," and to let Fortunado know why he was getting revenge (228). While Montresor was trying to get revenge, he could not get caugh by anyone. He did not want people to be suspicious about what he was doing. So Montresor planned it out so well that he would be able to get away with it. For Montresor's second rule he was suppose to let Fortunado know why he was getting revenge. To Understand each rule and know why Montresor did not get a perfect revenge the reader will have to keep reading.…
with similar subject matter, because the murderer tells the reader how he commits his crime. Poe leaves the reader with many questions. The story, according Baraban, centers around the mystery of why Montressor feels compelled to kill. The reader must first answer other questions to make this determination. Has Montressor truly fulfilled his desire to avenge Fortunato…
His emotional response was of controlled anger. Montresor may have had anger but it was hidden anger. Montresor didn’t show it in anyway to hint that he had loathing boiling inside him. He expressed this by saying, “ The thousand injuries of Fortunado I had borne as I best could; but when he ventured upon insult, I vowed my revenge”. Montresor was a very solemn man, for he would not show his greatest anger, but he will avenge what caused it. This is stated when he said, “You, who so well know the nature of my soul, will not suppose, however, that I gave utterance to a threat. At length I would…
The fact that Montresor is angry shows the reader that he has a different attitude and will retaliate. "THE thousand injuries of Fortunato I had borne as I best could, but when he ventured upon insult I vowed revenge"(P.1,Li.2-4). It is pretty easy to see that Montresor is sick of the little jives and is ready for action. This will now end all the bullying and Montresor will strike back with revenge.…
When Tom left the church he still couldn't shake what had just happened, this was something he could never imagine actually happening. His mother, Allison Monture, had just died from brain cancer. As Tom was only 13 years old he took this harder than anyone else, except for his father. Jerry Monture was always grinning widely and never a dull moment of life, but when his wife had passed away, every moment was dull.…
Then, I believe Montresor is bragging about his crime because of his statements. For instance page 177, the text states, “Nemo me impune lacessit.” This means “Nobody attacks me without punishment.” What Montresor means, is that Fortunato isn't going to get away with what he did to him. I think in this statement he is bragging because first off,…
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.…
Through his words and subsequent deeds we can also identify the trait of sadism in Montresor. “A wrong is redressed when retribution overtakes its redresser,” claims Montresor. He continues, “It is equally unredressed when the avenger fails to make himself felt as such to him who has done the wrong.” Montresor's aims are clear. Redress his perceived wrongs, punish the man who he feels wronged him, and make himself known to his offender as the one who has killed him. And while doing so, make him suffer in a way equal to the pain Montresor must have felt when insulted by Fortunato.…
Montressor is a man whose heart is filled with nothing but revenge for his friend Fortunato who insulted him. He gets it by killing Fortunato in a very uncommon way during Carnival. Since he was able to successfully kill Fortunato and not get caught in Edgar Allen Poe’s “The Cask of Amontillado” this proves his sanity.…
"The thousand injuries at the hands of Fortunato I had borne as best I could, but when he ventured upon insult I vowed revenge" (Poe, 173). Montresor is so convinced of the righteousness of his convictions that he "must not only punish but punish with impunity" (Poe, 173). Montresor also states how he must not fail to "make himself felt as such to him who has done the wrong" (Poe, 173). Montresor's words prove how his prideful obsessions have deluded his mind enough to believe that Fortunato's wrongs justify his agonizing death. Furthermore, Montresor believes he should go unpunished for his…
He says in the first few lines: “At length I would be avenged. I must not only punish, but punish with impunity” (p.1). The whole murder is arranged in details, he tells his servants to take a day off, so that no one can see him going to the vaults with Fortunato. Knowing about his connoisseurship in wine, Montresor skillfully makes Fortunato eager to go with him, claiming that he has rare and precious Amontillado. When he found Fortunato, Montresor says: “I was silly enough to pay the full Amontillado price without consulting you in the matter” (p.1) and then cleverly says: “As you are engaged, I’m on my way to Luchesi. If any one has a critical turn, it is he. He will tell me--” (p.1). Montresor takes advantage of Fortunato’s pride. Acting naturally, he gives no reason for anybody, including Fortunato, to suspect him to be mad or to have bad will. At the beginning, Montresor says: “It must be understood that neither by word or deed I had given Fortunato cause to doubt my good will” (p.1). During the fifty years of keeping his secret to himself, no one considers him mad and he reveals the truth only before his death by saying: “You, who so well know the nature of my soul, will not suppose, however, that gave utterance to the threat” (p.1). Most of the time, he behaves as a normal…
In the opening line, Montresor states that he has suffered a thousand injuries at the hand of Fortunato but now Fortunato has also insulted him and this is too much to take. Therefore, Montresor plots revenge. However, there is an indication that Montresor is insane because of lack of proof that Fortunado has ever injured or insulted him and of Fortunado’s friendly behaviors towards Montresor. In the whole story, Montresor has never narrated a single incident of injury or an act of insult that pushes him to the edge, that makes him a murderer. And even if Fortunado has done the thing that he, in Montresor’s mind, did, why would Montresor revenge for just one single insult? Wouldn’t “a thousand injuries” make a better motive for killing (Poe)? Therefore, Montresor’s reason to murder one person seems very unreasonable. Furthermore, later when they meet at the carnival, Fortunado is very friendly towards Montresor. If he has ever injured Montresor a thousand times for real, he will avoid meeting Montresor at the beginning. If Fortunado has insulted Montresor recently, he should have talked about that incident, or he may even say sorry about it. He can’t just let it go. Nevertheless, Fortunado has hardly mentioned it, and he is very cordial, like they’re best friends. Not only does Fortunato act friendly, but then volunteers to leave the carnival to go with Montresor to his home to test the Amontillado. Fortunato's vanity in being a connoisseur is part of that willingness, but surely he would not have been so cheerful in doing Montresor such a favor. Finally, Fortunato, this supposed enemy of Montresor, goes down into Montresor's cellar without the slightest bit of hesitation in being all alone in the dark cellar with someone he has supposedly injured and insulted. Montresor’s lack of proof and Fortunado’s warm actions both eliminate the idea that Fortunado is Montresor’s enemy. The one conclusion that can be drawn from the contradiction between Montresor's words and…
The first thing I realized about Montresor was his vengefulness, or his desire to harm. At the opening we read that Montresor has vowed revenge against Fortunato. The story opens with “The thousand injuries of Fortunato I had borne as I best could, but when he ventured upon insult I vowed revenge” (Poe, 1). It is there we see the animosity Montresor had toward Fortunato. In the beginning Montressor also said “I must not only punish but punish with impunity” (Poe, 1). That too revealed the resentment he had towards his friend.…