After the narrator killed the old man, they hid the body by cutting it up in pieces and hid them under the floorboard, and “there was nothing to wash out-no stain of any kind- no blood spot” because “a tub had caught all” (Poe, 13). This shows that the narrator was probably a professional housekeeper, so they knew how to cleanly cut things up, like meat or food, and how to clean stained objects. The last evidence that points to the narrator being a female was that the officers were suave and polite to the narrator. When the narrator went to get the door after finishing the deed, “three men, who introduced themselves, with perfect suavity, as the officers of the police” (Poe, 14), came and was “deputed to search the premises” (Poe, 14). This shows that the police officers were probably trying to look good in front of the narrator as she could have been a female, and usually police officers would go easier on females instead of males, thinking that girls are too delicate to do any dirty work. Overall, no one knows for sure what the gender of the narrator could have been in “The Tell-Tale Heart,” but many signs, like the narrator being a housekeeper, the murder being too clean, and the officers going easier on the narrator, lead to the gender being more of a female
After the narrator killed the old man, they hid the body by cutting it up in pieces and hid them under the floorboard, and “there was nothing to wash out-no stain of any kind- no blood spot” because “a tub had caught all” (Poe, 13). This shows that the narrator was probably a professional housekeeper, so they knew how to cleanly cut things up, like meat or food, and how to clean stained objects. The last evidence that points to the narrator being a female was that the officers were suave and polite to the narrator. When the narrator went to get the door after finishing the deed, “three men, who introduced themselves, with perfect suavity, as the officers of the police” (Poe, 14), came and was “deputed to search the premises” (Poe, 14). This shows that the police officers were probably trying to look good in front of the narrator as she could have been a female, and usually police officers would go easier on females instead of males, thinking that girls are too delicate to do any dirty work. Overall, no one knows for sure what the gender of the narrator could have been in “The Tell-Tale Heart,” but many signs, like the narrator being a housekeeper, the murder being too clean, and the officers going easier on the narrator, lead to the gender being more of a female