The use of light to represent hope and darkness to symbolize dismay adds to the menacing nature of the plot. This symbol is first introduced in the beginning of the piece. The “black-robed judges” decide the narrator’s fate, which he sees no escape from. His outlook shifts when he sees white candles and in them he sees “the aspect of charity, and… white and slender angels who would save [him]” (1). He is filled with a sense of hope that had been lost when looking at the dark robes of his torturers. This glimmer of the hope allows the reader to think that maybe the narrator is not doomed. Suspense is created as the reader anticipates the fate of the narrator. What the narrator fears the most throughout is the concept of what he cannot see. He recognizes that it is not “that [he] feared to look upon things horrible, but that [he] grew aghast lest there should be nothing to see” (3). Not knowing what is going to happen to him fills the narrator with a sense of helplessness. When light begins to show the narrator what he is up against, he becomes far more brave and determined. It is not that the narrator is afraid of the dark, but rather that it is human nature to fear what one cannot see or understand. With all of the terrible things that the narrator goes through, the worst thing he can imagine is not being able to see the horrors in store. “The Pit and the Pendulum” is the epitome of Poe’s signature use of imagery and symbols
The use of light to represent hope and darkness to symbolize dismay adds to the menacing nature of the plot. This symbol is first introduced in the beginning of the piece. The “black-robed judges” decide the narrator’s fate, which he sees no escape from. His outlook shifts when he sees white candles and in them he sees “the aspect of charity, and… white and slender angels who would save [him]” (1). He is filled with a sense of hope that had been lost when looking at the dark robes of his torturers. This glimmer of the hope allows the reader to think that maybe the narrator is not doomed. Suspense is created as the reader anticipates the fate of the narrator. What the narrator fears the most throughout is the concept of what he cannot see. He recognizes that it is not “that [he] feared to look upon things horrible, but that [he] grew aghast lest there should be nothing to see” (3). Not knowing what is going to happen to him fills the narrator with a sense of helplessness. When light begins to show the narrator what he is up against, he becomes far more brave and determined. It is not that the narrator is afraid of the dark, but rather that it is human nature to fear what one cannot see or understand. With all of the terrible things that the narrator goes through, the worst thing he can imagine is not being able to see the horrors in store. “The Pit and the Pendulum” is the epitome of Poe’s signature use of imagery and symbols