“I became insane, with long intervals of horrible sanity.” -Edgar Allen Poe In his story “The Black Cat”, Edgar Allen Poe acquaints us to a death row inmate who, believing he was bewitched by at cat, wishes to find “... some intellect more calm, more logical... which will perceive (his circumstances) nothing more than an ordinary succession of very natural causes and effects” (1). The man, also our narrator is an insane and opprobrious madman who murders his wife, only to be caught by the feline he fears is out to get him. This man proves to be an undependable narrator due to his paranoid hallucinations, lack of situational responsibility, and intoxication “Perverseness”
“I became insane, with long intervals of horrible sanity.” -Edgar Allen Poe In his story “The Black Cat”, Edgar Allen Poe acquaints us to a death row inmate who, believing he was bewitched by at cat, wishes to find “... some intellect more calm, more logical... which will perceive (his circumstances) nothing more than an ordinary succession of very natural causes and effects” (1). The man, also our narrator is an insane and opprobrious madman who murders his wife, only to be caught by the feline he fears is out to get him. This man proves to be an undependable narrator due to his paranoid hallucinations, lack of situational responsibility, and intoxication “Perverseness”